Click here to close
Hello! We notice that you are using Internet Explorer, which is not supported by Xenbase and may cause the site to display incorrectly.
We suggest using a current version of Chrome,
FireFox, or Safari.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
2007 Jul 31;10431:12743-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0702690104.
Show Gene links
Show Anatomy links
Reversibility in nucleocytoplasmic transport.
Kopito RB
,
Elbaum M
.
???displayArticle.abstract???
Nucleocytoplasmic exchange of proteins and RNAs is mediated by receptors that usher their cargo through the nuclear pores. Peptide localization signals on each cargo determine the receptors with which it will interact. Those interactions are normally regulated by the small GTPase Ran. Hydrolysis of GTP provides the chemical energy required to create a bona fide thermodynamic pump that selectively and directionally accumulates its substrates across the nuclear envelope. A common perception is that cargo delivery is irreversible, e.g., a protein imported to the nucleus does not return to the cytoplasm except perhaps via a specific export receptor. Quantitative measurements using cell-free nuclei reconstituted in Xenopus egg extract show that nuclear accumulation follows first-order kinetics and reaches steady state at a level that follows a Michaelis-Menten function of the cytoplasmic cargo concentration. This saturation suggests that receptor-mediated translocation across the nuclear pore occurs bidirectionally. The reversibility of accumulation was demonstrated directly by exchange of the cytosolic medium and by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching. Based on our results, we offer a simple biophysical model that predicts the observed behavior. A far-reaching consequence is that the nuclear localization signal dictates the fate of a protein population rather than that of the individual molecules that bear it, which remain free to shuttle back and forth. This implies an open communication between the nucleus and cytoplasm and a ubiquitous mechanism for signaling in both directions.
Bagley,
The nuclear pore complex.
2000,
Pubmed
Becskei,
The strategy for coupling the RanGTP gradient to nuclear protein export.
2003,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Ben-Efraim,
Gradient of increasing affinity of importin beta for nucleoporins along the pathway of nuclear import.
2001,
Pubmed
Catimel,
Biophysical characterization of interactions involving importin-alpha during nuclear import.
2001,
Pubmed
Chan,
In vitro study of nuclear assembly and nuclear import using Xenopus egg extracts.
2006,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
D'Angelo,
Nuclear pores form de novo from both sides of the nuclear envelope.
2006,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Denning,
Disorder in the nuclear pore complex: the FG repeat regions of nucleoporins are natively unfolded.
2003,
Pubmed
Dingwall,
The nucleoplasmin nuclear location sequence is larger and more complex than that of SV-40 large T antigen.
1988,
Pubmed
Fradin,
Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy close to a fluctuating membrane.
2003,
Pubmed
Fradin,
Dissociation of nuclear import cargo complexes by the protein Ran: a fluorescence correlation spectroscopy study.
2005,
Pubmed
Frey,
FG-rich repeats of nuclear pore proteins form a three-dimensional meshwork with hydrogel-like properties.
2006,
Pubmed
Görlich,
Transport between the cell nucleus and the cytoplasm.
1999,
Pubmed
Görlich,
Nucleocytoplasmic transport.
1996,
Pubmed
Görlich,
Characterization of Ran-driven cargo transport and the RanGTPase system by kinetic measurements and computer simulation.
2003,
Pubmed
Keminer,
Optical recording of signal-mediated protein transport through single nuclear pore complexes.
1999,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Kose,
beta-subunit of nuclear pore-targeting complex (importin-beta) can be exported from the nucleus in a Ran-independent manner.
1999,
Pubmed
Lee,
Structural basis for nuclear import complex dissociation by RanGTP.
2005,
Pubmed
Lim,
Flexible phenylalanine-glycine nucleoporins as entropic barriers to nucleocytoplasmic transport.
2006,
Pubmed
Lohka,
Roles of cytosol and cytoplasmic particles in nuclear envelope assembly and sperm pronuclear formation in cell-free preparations from amphibian eggs.
1984,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Lyman,
Influence of cargo size on Ran and energy requirements for nuclear protein import.
2002,
Pubmed
Macara,
Transport into and out of the nucleus.
2001,
Pubmed
Nachury,
The direction of transport through the nuclear pore can be inverted.
1999,
Pubmed
Nakielny,
Import and export of the nuclear protein import receptor transportin by a mechanism independent of GTP hydrolysis.
1998,
Pubmed
Newmeyer,
Egg extracts for nuclear import and nuclear assembly reactions.
1991,
Pubmed
,
Xenbase
Paradise,
Significant proportions of nuclear transport proteins with reduced intracellular mobilities resolved by fluorescence correlation spectroscopy.
2007,
Pubmed
Pemberton,
Mechanisms of receptor-mediated nuclear import and nuclear export.
2005,
Pubmed
Pollard,
A novel receptor-mediated nuclear protein import pathway.
1996,
Pubmed
Rexach,
Protein import into nuclei: association and dissociation reactions involving transport substrate, transport factors, and nucleoporins.
1995,
Pubmed
Ribbeck,
The translocation of transportin-cargo complexes through nuclear pores is independent of both Ran and energy.
1999,
Pubmed
Ribbeck,
Kinetic analysis of translocation through nuclear pore complexes.
2001,
Pubmed
Riddick,
A systems analysis of importin-{alpha}-{beta} mediated nuclear protein import.
2005,
Pubmed
Rout,
The nuclear pore complex as a transport machine.
2001,
Pubmed
Schwoebel,
Ran-dependent signal-mediated nuclear import does not require GTP hydrolysis by Ran.
1998,
Pubmed
Smith,
Systems analysis of Ran transport.
2002,
Pubmed
Stein,
Kinetics of transport: analyzing, testing, and characterizing models using kinetic approaches.
1989,
Pubmed
Takano,
tRNA actively shuttles between the nucleus and cytosol in yeast.
2005,
Pubmed
Timney,
Simple kinetic relationships and nonspecific competition govern nuclear import rates in vivo.
2006,
Pubmed
Vasu,
Nuclear pores and nuclear assembly.
2001,
Pubmed
Yang,
Nuclear import time and transport efficiency depend on importin beta concentration.
2006,
Pubmed