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1.
We studied the mechanism of transport of proteins into the nucleus using synthetic peptides containing the nuclear location signal sequence of Simian virus 40 (SV 40) large T-antigen. When chick erythrocytes containing a synthetic large T-antigen nuclear translocation signal were fused with SV 40-transformed human fibroblasts, the migration of native large T-antigen into the chick nuclei was suppressed. Migration of proteins detected by human specific antinuclear autoimmune antibody was not blocked. An analog of the nuclear location signal peptide did not inhibit entry of large T-antigen into the chick nuclei. This result suggests that the peptide blocked the migration of only native large T-antigen into the nucleus, and that the signal of the majority of nuclear proteins for nuclear transport is not the same as that of the large T-antigen. The synthetic peptide was conjugated chemically with bovine serum albumin (BSA) and introduced into the cytoplasm of cultured human cells by red blood cell ghost-mediated microinjection. The BSA-synthetic peptide conjugate was found predominantly in the nucleus within 2 h after its introduction into the cells. BSA conjugated with the cross-linking reagent alone was not transported into the nucleus. Acetylated synthetic peptide was not effective in promoting nuclear localization of BSA. Mild trypsin treatment of the BSA-synthetic peptide conjugate suppressed nuclear localization. Conjugates of the synthetic peptide with phycoerythrin (Mr about 150 kD) and with secretory IgA (Mr about 380 kD) were both found in the nucleus very shortly after their introduction into the cytoplasm. These results suggest that the synthetic peptide containing the nuclear location signal sequence provides exogenous proteins with the ability to migrate into the nucleus. But, since a conjugate of the synthetic peptide with IgM (Mr about 940 kD) did not migrate into the nucleus after its microinjection, there may be a size limit in nuclear transport of conjugated proteins.  相似文献   

2.
In the present study, various sized gold particles coated with tRNA, 5S RNA, or poly(A) were used to localize and characterize the pathways for RNA translocation to the cytoplasm. RNA-coated gold particles were microinjected into the nucleus of Xenopus oocytes. The cells were fixed after 15, 60 min, or 6 h, and the particle distribution was later observed by electron microscopy. Similar results were obtained with all classes of RNA used. After nuclear injection, particles ranging from 20-230 A in diameter were observed within central channels of the nuclear pores and in the cytoplasm immediately adjacent to the pores. Particles of this size would not be expected to diffuse through the pores, suggesting that some form of mediated transport occurred. In addition, it was found that the translocation process is saturable. At least 97% of the pores analyzed appeared to be involved in the translocation process. Gold coated with nonphysiological polynucleotides (poly[I] or poly[dA]) were also translocated. When nuclei were injected with either BSA-, ovalbumin-, polyglutamic acid-, or PVP-coated gold, the particles were essentially excluded from the pores. These results indicate that the accumulation of RNA-gold within the pores and adjacent cytoplasm was not due to non-specific effects. We conclude that the translocation sites for gold particles coated with different classes of RNA are located in the centers of the nuclear pores and that particles at least 230 A in diameter can cross the envelope. Tracer particles injected into the cytoplasm were observed within the nuclear pores in areas near the site of injection. However, only a small percentage of the particles actually entered the nucleus. It was also determined, by performing double injection experiments, that individual pores are bifunctional, that is, capable of transporting both proteins and RNA.  相似文献   

3.
Previously, we found that anti-DDDED antibodies strongly inhibited in vivo nuclear transport of nuclear proteins and that these antibodies recognized a protein of 69 kD (p69) from rat liver nuclear envelopes that showed specific binding activities to the nuclear location sequences (NLSs) of nucleoplasmin and SV-40 large T-antigen. Here we identified this protein as the 70-kD heat shock cognate protein (hsc70) based on its mass, isoelectric point, cellular localization, and partial amino acid sequences. Competition studies indicated that the recombinant hsc70 expressed in Escherichia coli binds to transport competent SV-40 T-antigen NLS more strongly than to the point mutated transport incompetent mutant NLS. To investigate the possible involvement of hsc70 in nuclear transport, we examined the effect of anti-hsc70 rabbit antibodies on the nuclear accumulation of karyophilic proteins. When injected into the cytoplasm of tissue culture cells, anti-hsc70 strongly inhibited the nuclear import of nucleoplasmin, SV-40 T-antigen NLS bearing BSA and histone H1. In contrast, anti-hsc70 IgG did not prevent the diffusion of lysozyme or 17.4-kD FITC-dextran into the nuclei. After injection of these antibodies, cells continued RNA synthesis and were viable. These results indicate that hsc70 interacts with NLS-containing proteins in the cytoplasm before their nuclear import.  相似文献   

4.
The signal sequence of a nuclear-directed protein encodes the necessary information for targeting the attached proteins to the cell nucleus. The sequence/structural requirements for a functional transport signal were explored with a series of peptides derived from the simian virus 40 large T-antigen nuclear signal 126–134 (CPKKKRKVED-NH2, wild type) conjugated to bovine serum albumin (BSA) through an N-terminal Cys (1) with m-maleimidobenzoyl-N-hydroxysuccinimide ester. Nuclear accumulation was virtually complete 15 min after microinjection into green monkey kidney cells (TC-7). Peptides with Asn, Orn, and Gln substituted for Lys128, the reverse wild-type peptide (DEVKRKKKPC-NH2) and the long 34-residue wild-type analogue (CYDDEATADSQHSTPPKKKRKVEDPKDFESELLS-NH2), were synthesized and conjugated similarly to BSA. The Orn peptide and the 34-residue wild-type analogue conjugated to BSA also transported to the nucleus but at a slower rate than 1. The reverse wild-type, Asn- and Gln-BSA conjugates of these signal analogues did not show transport to the nucleus after 6 h of incubation. In an effort to learn if such signal sequences would also target a small molecule such as a fluorescent tag to the nucleus, 1 fluorescently tagged with monobromobimane was prepared and microinjected into TC-7 cells. The peptide was distributed throughout the cell. These results support the notion that a positively charged residue at position 128 is needed for rapid nuclear transport and that the intracellular transport machinery has spatial recognition. The results with fluorophore-peptide conjugates suggest nuclear localization of these low molecular weight peptides will be difficult to attain even if attached to a functional nuclear localization sequence.  相似文献   

5.
Movement of a karyophilic protein through the nuclear pores of oocytes   总被引:98,自引:42,他引:56  
It has recently been shown that large karyophilic proteins are transported across the nuclear envelope in amphibian oocytes. In consideration of this, the present experiments were performed to identify the specific sites within the envelope through which transport occurs and determine if molecular size is a limiting factor in the transport process. The following experimental procedure was employed: Colloidal gold particles, varying in size from approximately 20 to 170 A in diameter were coated with nucleoplasmin, a 165,000-mol-wt karyophilic protein, which is known to be transported through the envelope. The coated gold particles were microinjected into the cytoplasm of Xenopus oocytes, and the cells were fixed 15 min and 1 h later. The intracellular localization of the gold was then determined with the electron microscope. It was found that nucleoplasmin-coated particles readily enter the nucleus. On the basis of the distribution of the particles associated with the envelope, we concluded that transport occurs through the nuclear pores. Furthermore, the size distributions of the gold particles present in the nucleus and cytoplasm were not significantly different, indicating that the envelope does not discriminate among particles with diameters ranging from 50 to 200 A (the dimensions including the nucleoplasmin coat). Colloidal gold coated with trypsin-digested nucleoplasmin (which lacks the polypeptide domain required for transport) or exogenous polyvinylpyrrolidone were largely excluded from the nucleus and showed no evidence of transport.  相似文献   

6.
Bidirectional transport of macromolecules between the nucleus and the cytoplasm occurs through the nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) by a signal-mediated mechanism that is directed by targeting signals (NLSs) residing on the transported molecules or "cargoes." Nuclear transport starts after interaction of the targeting signal with soluble cellular receptors. After the formation of the cargo-receptor complex in the cytosol, this complex crosses the NPC. Herein, we use gold particles of various sizes coated with cargo-receptor complexes to determine precisely how large macromolecules crossing the NPC by the signal-mediated transport mechanism could be. We found that cargo-receptor-gold complexes with diameter close to 39 nm could be translocated by the NPC. This implies that macromolecules much larger than the assumed functional NPC diameter of 26 nm can be transported into the karyoplasm. The physiological relevance of this finding was supported by the observation that intact nucleocapsids of human hepatitis B virus with diameters of 32 and 36 nm are able to cross the nuclear pore without disassembly.  相似文献   

7.
H P Rihs  R Peters 《The EMBO journal》1989,8(5):1479-1484
Selective nuclear protein transport was analyzed in single living cells. Hybrid proteins consisting of short stretches of the Simian virus 40 T-antigen and of the almost complete beta-galactosidase moiety were generated by molecular genetic methods and injected into the cytoplasm of rodent hepatoma cells. A histochemical assay showed that all proteins containing the karyophilic signal of the T-antigen (residues 126/127-132) were equally well accumulated by the nucleus within 15 h after injection. Microfluorimetric measurements of nuclear transport kinetics, however, revealed large differences. Proteins containing the karyophilic signal without flanking sequences were taken up by the nucleus on a time scale of hours. The same held for a protein containing T-antigen residues 127-147. However, a protein containing T-antigen residues 111-135 was accumulated by the nucleus with a half-time of 8-10 min reaching an equilibrium nucleocytoplasmic concentration ratio of greater than or equal to 15. Photobleaching measurements showed that, independently of subcellular localization, the mobility of all proteins was quite large. Thus, our measurements revealed a striking effect of T-antigen residues 111-125 on the kinetics of nuclear transport. Residues 111-125 do not seem to contain a second karyophilic signal. Conspicuously, however, they comprise a cluster of phosphorylation sites.  相似文献   

8.
Simian virus 40 T antigen is specifically targeted to the nucleus by the signal Pro-Lys-Lys-128-Lys-Arg-Lys-Val. We have previously described the isolation of a simian virus 40 T-antigen mutant, 676FS, which retains a wild-type nuclear localization signal but fails to accumulate properly in the nucleus and interferes with the nuclear localization of heterologous proteins. Here we report that the hydrophobic carboxy-terminal sequence novel to 676FS T antigen overrides the nuclear localization signal if fused to other proteins, thereby anchoring the proteins in the cytoplasm. We discuss possible mechanisms by which missorting of such a fusion protein could interfere with the nuclear transport of heterologous proteins.  相似文献   

9.
The HIV-1 auxiliary protein Vif contains a basic domain within its sequence. This basic region,90RKKR93, is similar to the prototypic nuclear localization signal (NLS). However, Vif is not a nuclear protein and does not function in the nucleus. Here we have studied the karyophilic properties of this basic region. We have synthesized peptides corresponding to this positively charged NLS-like region and observed that these peptides inhibited nuclear transport via the importin pathway in vitro with IC50values in the micromolar range. Inhibition was observed only with peptides derived from the positively charged region, but not from other regions of the Vif protein, showing sequence specificity. On the other hand, the Vif inhibitory peptide Vif88-98 did not confer karyophilic properties when conjugated to BSA. The inactive Vif conjugate and the active SV40-NLS-BSA conjugate both contained a similar number of peptides conjugated to each BSA molecule, as was determined by amino acid analysis of the peptide-BSA conjugates. Thus, the lack of nuclear import of the Vif peptide-BSA conjugate cannot be attributed to insufficient number of conjugated peptide molecules per BSA molecule. Our results suggest that the HIV-1 Vif protein carries an NLS-like sequence that inhibits, but does not mediate, nuclear import via the importin pathway. We have termed such signals as nuclear transport inhibitory signals (NTIS). The possible role of NTIS in controlling nuclear uptake, and specifically during virus infection, is discussed herein. Our results raise the possibility that NLS-like sequences of certain low molecular weight viral proteins may serve as regulators of nucleocytoplasmic trafficking and not neccessarily as mediators of nuclear import.  相似文献   

10.
A small GTPase Ran is a key regulator for active nuclear transport. In immunoblotting analysis, a monoclonal antibody against recombinant human Ran, designated ARAN1, was found to recognize an epitope in the COOH-terminal domain of Ran. In a solution binding assay, ARAN1 recognized Ran when complexed with importin beta, transportin, and CAS, but not the Ran-GTP or the Ran-GDP alone, indicating that the COOH-terminal domain of Ran is exposed via its interaction with importin beta-related proteins. In addition, ARAN1 suppressed the binding of RanBP1 to the Ran-importin beta complex. When injected into the nucleus of BHK cells, ARAN1 was rapidly exported to the cytoplasm, indicating that the Ran-importin beta-related protein complex is exported as a complex from the nucleus to the cytoplasm in living cells. Moreover, ARAN1, when injected into the cultured cells induces the accumulation of endogenous Ran in the cytoplasm and prevents the nuclear import of SV-40 T-antigen nuclear localization signal substrates. From these findings, we propose that the binding of RanBP1 to the Ran-importin beta complex is required for the dissociation of the complex in the cytoplasm and that the released Ran is recycled to the nucleus, which is essential for the nuclear protein transport.  相似文献   

11.
We previously reported that both the nuclear import rate of large karyophilic gold particles and the functional size of the pores are significantly greater in simian virus 40-transformed fibroblasts (the SV-T2 cell line) than in nontransformed BALB/c 3T3 cells. In this study, we found that cytosolic fractions obtained from SV-T2 cultures can increase nuclear transport capacity (both import rate and pore size) when microinjected into BALB/c 3T3 cells. The transport-enhancing function of the extracts can be abolished by the protein kinase inhibitors staurosporine and K252a as well as 5'-p-fluorosulfonylbenzoyladenosine and protein phosphatase 2A, which, although less specific, also interfere with kinase activity. Increases in transport capacity of the same magnitude as that produced by the SV-T2 extracts were obtained by microinjecting protein kinase A or C or recombinant mitogen-activated protein kinase. These data provide further support for the interpretation that the enhancer is a protein kinase. From experiments performed with specific kinase inhibitor peptides, it appears likely that protein kinase C is the active factor in the SV-T2 cytosolic fractions; however, this will require further verification. It was also determined, by using gold particles coated with bovine serum albumin conjugated to synthetic nuclear localization signal peptides that lacked phosphorylation sites, that the enhancer affects the transport machinery rather than the activity of the nuclear localization signals.  相似文献   

12.
The import of large molecules into the nucleus is an active process that requires the presence in cis of a nuclear localization signal (NLS). Although these signals have been well characterized in mammalian, yeast, and amphibian nuclear proteins, no plant NLS has yet been described. The NLSs identified so far generally contain clusters of basic amino acids. This characteristic feature prompted us to test several basic domains from the plant DNA-binding proteins TGA-1A and TGA-1B and the TATA box-binding protein TFIID for nuclear targeting function. When tested as N-terminal fusions to the beta-glucuronidase protein, only those constructs containing the DNA binding (basic) domain of the basic-zipper (B-ZIP) region of TGA-1A or TGA-1B conferred nuclear import. These results suggest a close association or overlap of the DNA binding and nuclear targeting domains of B-ZIP proteins. We also demonstrated that a wild-type but not a mutant simian virus 40 large T-antigen NLS facilitates import into plant nuclei, indicating a strong conservation between nuclear import mechanisms in animals and plants.  相似文献   

13.
T C Dembinski 《FEBS letters》1984,173(1):129-133
Subcellular fractions from SV-40 transformed hamster lens cells, prepared by chemical extractions, were tested for the presence of T-antigen by immunoautoradiography. Most of the T-antigen was present in the nucleus and was resistant to extraction by 2 M NaCl, indicating an association with the nuclear matrix. Another part of the T-antigen was, under certain conditions, resistant to extraction of the cells with a nonionic detergent. This T-antigen could be solubilized by Ca2+ at low temperature, conditions that also cause a specific depolymerization of microtubules.  相似文献   

14.
To deliver nonnuclear proteins into the nucleus, we have examined the locations and number of nuclear localizing signals by use of simian virus 40 large T-antigen (SV40Ta) and yeast enhanced green fluorescent protein (yEGFP) in Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a model system. When only one SV40Ta was added to either the N- or C-terminus of yEGFP, the fluorescence of yEGFP was detected in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm. When two SV40Ta signals were added, one to the N-terminus and one to the C-terminus of yEGFP (SV40Ta-yEGFP-SV40Ta), the fluorescence of yEGFP was localized in only the nucleus. When the presequence of cytochrome oxidase subunit IV (pCOXIV) was inserted between the SV40Ta and the N-terminus of yEGFP (SV40Ta-pCOXIV-yEGFP-SV40Ta) in this construct, the fluorescence was located in both the nucleus and the cytoplasm, suggesting that the increased distance between the two SV40Ta signals decreased the efficiency of transport into the nucleus. When an additional SV40Ta signal was inserted between pCOXIV and yEGFP (SV40Ta-pCOXIV-SV40Ta-yEGFP), the fluorescence was localized only in the nucleus, indicating that two SV40Ta signals spaced by pCOXIV of 28 amino acid residues forming an alpha-helix are potent in transporting yEGFP into the nucleus. These results indicate that two SV40Ta signals spaced appropriately are essential for the efficient transport of the nonnuclear protein into the nucleus.  相似文献   

15.
Gold nanoparticles modified with nuclear localization peptides were synthesized and evaluated for their subcellular distribution in HeLa human cervical epithelium cells, 3T3/NIH murine fibroblastoma cells, and HepG2 human hepatocarcinoma cells. Video-enhanced color differential interference contrast microscopy and transmission electron microscopy indicated that transport of nanoparticles into the cytoplasm and nucleus depends on peptide sequence and cell line. Recently, the ability of certain peptides, called protein transduction domains (PTDs), to transclocate cell and nuclear membranes in a receptor- and temperature-independent manner has been questioned (see for example, Lundberg, M.; Wikstrom, S.; Johansson, M. (2003) Mol. Ther. 8, 143-150). We have evaluated the cellular trajectory of gold nanoparticles carrying the PTD from HIV Tat protein. Our observations were that (1) the conjugates did not enter the nucleus of 3T3/NIH or HepG2 cells, and (2) cellular uptake of Tat PTD peptide-gold nanoparticle conjugates was temperature dependent, suggesting an endosomal pathway of uptake. Gold nanoparticles modified with the adenovirus nuclear localization signal and the integrin binding domain also entered cells via an energy-dependent mechanism, but in contrast to the Tat PTD, these signals triggered nuclear uptake of nanoparticles in HeLa and HepG2 cell lines.  相似文献   

16.
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   

17.
Nuclear proteins contain a signal, termed the nuclear transport signal, that specifies their selective transport into the nucleus. Previously we reported that antibodies to Asp-Asp-Asp-Glu-Asp (DDDED) inhibited nuclear transport of nuclear proteins in vivo. We therefore tried to detect a cellular receptor of nuclear transport signals as a protein that reacted with both anti-DDDED antibody and nuclear transport signal sequences. Using two steps of affinity chromatography, anti-DDDED-Sepharose and nucleoplasmin-Sepharose, we obtained a protein of 69 kDa (p69) from the nuclear pore fraction that showed these characters. This p69 recognized by anti-DDDED antibody interacted specifically with SV40 large T antigen and nucleoplasmin transport signals.  相似文献   

18.
We have constructed a series of mutations in the human A lamin cDNA to identify and alter the nuclear localization signal using an in vivo functional assay system. The nuclear localization signal in the lamin proteins has both structural and functional similarities with that of the SV40 large T-antigen. Mutations within this functional domain result in the assembly of cytoplasmic tubular structures, and the behavior of these mutants suggests a post-translational dimerization of the lamin proteins prior to their transport into the nucleus. In the course of this work other regions of the carboxy terminus of the A/C lamin proteins have been implicated in the proper assembly and structure of the nuclear envelope.  相似文献   

19.
Assembly and intracellular transport of snRNP particles.   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
The assembly of the major small nuclear ribonucleoprotein (snRNP) particles begins in the cytoplasm where large pools of common core proteins are preassembled in several RNA-free intermediate particles. Newly synthesized snRNAs transiently enter the cytoplasm and complex with core particles to form pre-snRNP particles. Subsequently, the cap structure at the 5' end of the snRNA is hypermethylated. The resulting trimethylguanosine (TMG) cap is an integral part of the nuclear localization signal for snRNP particles and the pre-snRNP particles are rapidly transported into the nucleus. SnRNP particles mature when snRNA-specific proteins complex with the particles, in some cases, just before or during nuclear transport, but in most instances after the particles are in the nucleus. In addition, U6 snRNA hybridizes with U4 snRNA to form a U4/U6 snRNP in the nucleus. The transport signals are retained on the snRNP particles and proteins since existing particles and proteins enter the reformed nucleus after mitosis.  相似文献   

20.
Ciufo LF  Brown JD 《Current biology : CB》2000,10(20):1256-1264
BACKGROUND: The movement of macromolecules through the nuclear pores requires energy and transport receptors that bind both cargo and nuclear pores. Different molecules/complexes often require different transport receptors. The signal recognition particle (SRP) is a conserved cytosolic ribonucleoprotein that targets proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum. Previous studies have shown that the export of SRP RNA from the nucleus requires trans-acting factors and that SRP may be at least partly assembled in the nucleus, but little else is known about how it is assembled and exported into the cytoplasm. RESULTS: Of the six proteins that constitute the yeast SRP, we found that all except Srp54p were imported into the nucleus. Four of these had nucleolar pools. The same four proteins are required for stability of the yeast SRP RNA scR1, suggesting that they assemble with the RNA in the nucleus to form a central core SRP. This core SRP was a competent export substrate. Of the remaining components, Sec65p entered the nucleus and was assembled onto the core particle there, whereas Srp54p was solely cytoplasmic. The export of SRP from the nucleus required the transport receptor Xpo1p/Crm1p and Yrb2p, both components of the pathway that exports leucine-rich nuclear export signal (NES)-containing proteins from the nucleus. CONCLUSIONS: The SRP is assembled in the nucleus into a complex lacking only Srp54p. It is then exported through the NES pathway into the cytoplasm where Srp54p binds to it. This transport route for a ribonucleoprotein complex is so far unique in yeast.  相似文献   

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