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The nuclear pore complex is the gateway for protein and RNA transport between the cytoplasm and nucleus. Recent work has characterized signals and components involved in nuclear import of macromolecules and has described mechanisms for transport regulation. Advances in understanding the structure of the pore complex are starting to provide a framework for interpreting the biochemistry of nuclear import. Information on the export of RNA from the nucleus is only beginning to emerge.  相似文献   

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The double membrane of the nuclear envelope is a formidable barrier separating the nucleus and cytoplasm of eukaryotic cells. However, movement of specific macromolecules across the nuclear envelope is critical for embryonic development, cell growth and differentiation. Transfer of molecules between the nucleus and cytoplasm occurs through the aqueous channel formed by the nuclear pore complex (NPC)
  • 1 Abbreviations: NPC, nuclear pore complex; GlcNac, N-acetylglucosamine; WGA, wheat germ agglutinin
  • . Although small molecules may simply diffuse across the NPC, transport of large proteins and RNA requires specific transport signals and is energy dependent. A family of pore glycoproteins modified by O-linked N-acetylglucosamine moieties are essential for transport through the NPC. Recent evidence suggests that the regulation of nuclear transport may also involve the inteaction of RNA and nuclear proteins with specific binding proteins that recognize these transport signals. Are these nuclear pore glycoproteins and signal binding proteins the ‘gatekeepers’ that control access to the genetic material? Recent evidence obtained from a combination of biochemical and genetic approaches suggests – perhaps.  相似文献   

    4.
    Translocation through the nuclear pore complex   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
    The nuclear transport field has completed a decade of fast-paced research dominated by the discovery of transport signals, receptors, and regulators. What might be considered the Holy Grail of nuclear transport – the physical basis of translocation through the nuclear pore – is now under close scrutiny. Recent publications describe structural and biochemical approaches that help address key aspects of the translocation mechanism. These studies have led to the affinity gradient, Brownian affinity gate and selective phase models of translocation.  相似文献   

    5.
    The nuclear pore complex (NPC) is the sole gateway between the nucleus and the cytoplasm of interphase eukaryotic cells, and it mediates all trafficking between these 2 cellular compartments. As such, the NPC and nuclear transport play central roles in translocating death signals from the cell membrane to the nucleus where they initiate biochemical and morphological changes occurring during apoptosis. Recent findings suggest that the correlation between the NPC, nuclear transport, and apoptosis goes beyond the simple fact that NPCs mediate nuclear transport of key players involved in the cell death program. In this context, the accessibility of key regulators of apoptosis appears to be highly modulated by nuclear transport (e.g., impaired nuclear import might be an apoptotic trigger). In this review, recent findings concerning the unexpected tight link between NPCs, nuclear transport, and apoptosis will be presented and critically discussed.  相似文献   

    6.
    It has been appreciated for some time that basic-amino-acid-type nuclear localization signals control nuclear uptake of proteins and that leucine-rich nuclear export signals mediate export back into the cytoplasm. The machinery that recognizes and escorts these well-defined protein transport signals through the nuclear pore complex has been identified and characterized. Does this mean that the nuclear transport field knows all it needs to about transport signals? Not quite, as several recent publications have expanded the membership of a growing family of transport signals, known as nucleocytoplasmic shuttling (NS) signals. All proteins currently known to contain this type of signal also associate with mRNA. This article reviews what is currently known about mediators of NS signal transport and discusses the link between NS signal-containing proteins and RNA export.  相似文献   

    7.
    Nucleocytoplasmic transport of macromolecules.   总被引:23,自引:0,他引:23       下载免费PDF全文
    Nucleocytoplasmic transport is a complex process that consists of the movement of numerous macromolecules back and forth across the nuclear envelope. All macromolecules that move in and out of the nucleus do so via nuclear pore complexes that form large proteinaceous channels in the nuclear envelope. In addition to nuclear pores, nuclear transport of macromolecules requires a number of soluble factors that are found both in the cytoplasm and in the nucleus. A combination of biochemical, genetic, and cell biological approaches have been used to identify and characterize the various components of the nuclear transport machinery. Recent studies have shown that both import to and export from the nucleus are mediated by signals found within the transport substrates. Several studies have demonstrated that these signals are recognized by soluble factors that target these substrates to the nuclear pore. Once substrates have been directed to the pore, most transport events depend on a cycle of GTP hydrolysis mediated by the small Ras-like GTPase, Ran, as well as other proteins that regulate the guanine nucleotide-bound state of Ran. Many of the essential factors have been identified, and the challenge that remains is to determine the exact mechanism by which transport occurs. This review attempts to present an integrated view of our current understanding of nuclear transport while highlighting the contributions that have been made through studies with genetic organisms such as the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae.  相似文献   

    8.
    The polarized morphology of neurons poses a particular challenge to intracellular signal transduction. Local signals generated at distal sites must be retrogradely transported to the nucleus to produce persistent changes in neuronal function. Such communication of signals between distal neuronal compartments and the nucleus occurs during axon guidance, synapse formation, synaptic plasticity and following neuronal injury. Recent studies have begun to delineate a role for the active nuclear import pathway in transporting signals from axons and dendrites to the nucleus. In this pathway, soluble cargo proteins are recognized by nuclear transport carriers, called importins, which mediate their translocation from the cytoplasm into the nucleus. In neurons, importins might serve an additional function by carrying signals from distal sites to the soma.  相似文献   

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    The transport of proteins into the nucleus requires not only the presence of a nuclear transport signal on the targeted protein but also the signal recognition proteins and the nuclear pore translocation apparatus. Complicating the search for the signal recognition proteins is the fact that the nuclear transport signals identified share little obvious homology. In this study, synthetic peptides homologous to the nuclear transport signals from the simian virus 40 large T antigen, Xenopus oocyte nucleoplasmin, adenovirus E1A, and Saccharomyces cerevisiae MAT alpha 2 proteins were coupled to a UV-photoactivable cross-linker and iodinated for use in an in vitro cross-linking reaction with cellular lysates. Four proteins, p140, p100, p70, and p55, which specifically interacted with the nuclear transport signal peptides were identified. Unique patterns of reactivity were observed with closely related pairs of nuclear transport signal peptides. Competition experiments with labeled and unlabeled peptides demonstrated that heterologous signals were able to bind the same protein and suggested that diverse signals use a common transport pathway. The subcellular distribution of the four nuclear transport signal-binding proteins suggested that nuclear transport involves both cytoplasmic and nuclear receptors. The four proteins were not bound by wheat germ agglutinin and were not associated tightly with the nuclear pore complex.  相似文献   

    11.
    Transport of macromolecules between the nucleus and the cytoplasm.   总被引:15,自引:1,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
    Nuclear transport is an energy-dependent process mediated by saturable receptors. Import and export receptors are thought to recognize and bind to nuclear localization signals or nuclear export signals, respectively, in the transported molecules. The receptor-substrate interaction can be direct or mediated by an additional adapter protein. The transport receptors dock their cargoes to the nuclear pore complexes (NPC) and facilitate their translocation through the NPC. After delivering their cargoes, the receptors are recycled to initiate additional rounds of transport. Because a transport event for a cargo molecule is unidirectional, the transport receptors engage in asymmetric cycles of translocation across the NPC. The GTPase Ran acts as a molecular switch for receptor-cargo interaction and imparts directionality to the transport process. Recently, the combined use of different in vitro and in vivo approaches has led to the characterization of novel import and export signals and to the identification of the first nuclear import and export receptors.  相似文献   

    12.
    The human immunodeficiency Rev protein shuttles between the nucleus and cytoplasm, while accumulating to high levels in the nucleus. Rev has a nuclear localization signal (NLS; AA 35-50) with an arginine-rich motif (ARM) that interacts with importin beta and a leucine-rich nuclear export signal (NES; AA 75-84) recognized by CRM1/exportin 1. Here we explore nuclear targeting activities of the transport signals of Rev. GFP tagging and quantitative fluorescence microscopy were used to study the localization behavior of Rev NLS/ARM mutants under conditions inhibiting the export of Rev. Rev mutant M5 was actively transported to the nucleus, despite its known failure to bind importin beta. Microinjection of transport substrates with Rev-NES peptides revealed that the Rev-NES has both nuclear import and export activities. Replacement of amino acid residues "PLER" (77-80) of the NES with alanines abolished bidirectional transport activity of the Rev-NES. These results indicate that both transport signals of Rev have nuclear import capabilities and that the Rev NLS has more than one nuclear targeting activity. This suggests that Rev is able to use various routes for nuclear entry rather than depending on a single pathway.  相似文献   

    13.
    Nuclear‐cytoplasmic transport is necessary for the biological function of nuclear proteins. The mechanism underlying this process is very complex and has been a subject of intense research. Yes‐associated protein (YAP), a Hippo signaling pathway effector, localizes to both the cytoplasm and the nucleus and can influence cell proliferation, stem cell status, and tissue homeostasis. Recent studies have focused on the significance of YAP distribution between the nucleus and the cytoplasm in disease, but it remains unclear how this dynamic process is regulated. In this review, we discuss YAP nuclear‐cytoplasmic transport under different physiological and pathological conditions in terms of mechanical signaling, protein modification, and metabolism. Understanding the mechanisms underlying nuclear‐cytoplasmic YAP transport mechanism under different physiological and pathological conditions may help identify important targets for disease treatment.  相似文献   

    14.
    We used Agrobacterium T-DNA nuclear transport to examine the specificity of nuclear targeting between plants and animals and the nuclear import of DNA by a specialized transport protein. Two karyophilic Agrobacterium virulence (Vir) proteins, VirD2 and VirE2, which presumably associate with the transported T-DNA and function in many plant species, were microinjected into Drosophila embryos and Xenopus oocytes. In both animal systems, VirD2 localized to the cell nuclei and VirE2 remained exclusively cytoplasmic, suggesting that VirE2 nuclear localization signals may be plant specific. Repositioning one amino acid residue within VirE2 nuclear localization signals enabled them to function in animal cells. The modified VirE2 protein bound DNA and actively transported it into the nuclei of Xenopus oocytes. These observations suggest a functional difference in nuclear import between animals and plants and show that DNA can be transported into the cell nucleus via a protein-specific pathway.  相似文献   

    15.
    Transport between the nucleus and the cytoplasm occurs through large macromolecular assemblies called nuclear pore complexes (NPCs). The NPC is traditionally viewed as a passive structure whose primary role is to provide an interface for the soluble transport machinery, the karyopherins and their cargos, to move molecules between these compartments. Recent work has challenged this view of the NPC and provides support for a dynamic structure that can modify its architecture to actively regulate nuclear transport.  相似文献   

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    Nuclear pore complexes are constitutive structures of the nuclear envelope in eukaryotic cells and represent the sites where transport of molecules between nucleus and cytoplasm takes place. However, pore complexes of similar structure, but with largely unknown functional properties, are long known to occur also in certain cytoplasmic cisternae that have been termed annulate lamellae (AL). To analyze the capability of the AL pore complex to interact with the soluble mediators of nuclear protein import and their karyophilic protein substrates, we have performed a microinjection study in stage VI oocytes ofXenopus laevis.In these cells AL are especially abundant and can easily be identified by light and electron microscopy. Following injection into the cytoplasm, fluorochrome-labeled mediators of two different nuclear import pathways, importin β and transportin, not only associate with the nuclear envelope but also with AL. Likewise, nuclear localization signals (NLS) of the basic and M9 type, but not nuclear export signals, confer targeting and transient binding of fluorochrome-labeled proteins to cytoplasmic AL. Mutation or deletion of the NLS signals prevents these interactions. Furthermore, binding to AL is abolished by dominant negative inhibitors of nuclear protein import. Microinjections of gold-coupled NLS-bearing proteins reveal specific gold decoration at distinct sites within the AL pore complex. These include such at the peripheral pore complex-attached fibrils and at the central “transporter” and closely resemble those of “transport intermediates” found in electron microscopic studies of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). These data demonstrate that AL can represent distinct sites within the cytoplasm of transient accumulation of nuclear proteins and that the AL pore complex shares functional binding properties with the NPC.  相似文献   

    18.
    真核细胞核膜上的核孔复合体 (nuclear pore complex, NPC) 是细胞核内外进行物质交换的主要通道, 分子量较小的化合物可自由通过NPC或采取被动扩散的方式进入细胞核, 而分子量为50 kD以上的蛋白质则只能通过主动转运进入细胞核. 以这种方式进入细胞核的 蛋白质必须在其氨基酸序列上拥有特殊的核定位信号(nuclear localization signal, NLS)以被相应的核转运蛋白(karyopherins) 识别. 核定位信号具有多样性, 包括经典核定位信号(classical NLS,cNLS), 内输蛋白β2识别的核定位信号(又称PY模体-NLS)和其它类型的NLS. 每一类NLS具有相似的特征, 但并不具有完全保守的氨基酸组成. 不同的NLS, 往往对应着各不相同的核输入机制. 而对同一蛋白质来说, 也可能同时拥有几个功能性的NLS. 研究核定位信号一方面可以帮助揭示新的大分子物质核转运机制, 另一方面也有助于发现一些蛋白质的新功能. 本文对常见NLS的分类进行了总结, 并介绍了两种常用的NLS预测软件及鉴定NLS的一般策略.  相似文献   

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    Nucleocytoplasmic transport: cargo trafficking across the border   总被引:16,自引:0,他引:16  
    Transport of macromolecules between the cytoplasm and the nucleus is mediated by at least three different classes of soluble transport receptors, members of the importin-beta protein family, the Mex67/Tap family and the small nuclear transport factor 2 (NFT2). All nuclear transport factors can bidirectionally traverse the nuclear pore complex through specific interactions with phenylalanine/glycine-rich nuclear pore complex components. Recent kinetic and structural analyses revealed novel insight into the details of these interactions. In addition, new biochemical and genetic studies have dramatically improved our understanding of ribosomal and messenger RNA export, unveiling a tight coupling between RNA processing and transport.  相似文献   

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