While much has been learned in recent years about the movement of soluble transport factors across the nuclear pore complex (NPC), comparatively little is known about intranuclear trafficking. We isolated the previously identified Saccharomyces protein Mlp1p (myosin-like protein) by an assay designed to find nuclear envelope (NE) associated proteins that are not nucleoporins. We localized both Mlp1p and a closely related protein that we termed Mlp2p to filamentous structures stretching from the nucleoplasmic face of the NE into the nucleoplasm, similar to the homologous vertebrate and Drosophila Tpr proteins. Mlp1p can be imported into the nucleus by virtue of a nuclear localization sequence (NLS) within its COOH-terminal domain. Overexpression experiments indicate that Mlp1p can form large structures within the nucleus which exclude chromatin but appear highly permeable to proteins. Remarkably, cells harboring a double deletion of MLP1 and MLP2 were viable, although they showed a slower net rate of active nuclear import and faster passive efflux of a reporter protein. Our data indicate that the Tpr homologues are not merely NPC-associated proteins but that they can be part of NPC-independent, peripheral intranuclear structures. In addition, we suggest that the Tpr filaments could provide chromatin-free conduits or tracks to guide the efficient translocation of macromolecules between the nucleoplasm and the NPC.
Proteins Connecting the Nuclear Pore Complex with the Nuclear Interior
Address correspondence to Dr. G. Blobel, Laboratory of Cell Biology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, The Rockefeller University, New York, New York 10021. Tel.: (212) 327-8096. Fax: (212) 327-7880. E-mail: [email protected]
We are very grateful to J. Aitchison, C. Akey, R. Beckmann, N. Bonifaci, Y. Chook, E. Coutavas, U. O'Doherty, R. Erdmann, B. Fontoura, J. Helmers, M. Hurwitz, E. Johnson, J. Kilmartin, M. Matunis, L. Pemberton, and S. Smith for many helpful suggestions and discussions throughout the course of this study. We are deeply indebted to J. Aris, C. Cole, D. Goldfarb, E. Johnson, J. Kilmartin, M. Lewis, L. Pemberton, M. Sogaard, K. Weis, and R. Wozniak, for providing us with antibodies and other reagents without which this work would not have been possible and to T. De Lange and J. Karlsreder for assistance in collecting the immunofluorescence data presented here. Many thanks also to R. Beckmann, Y. Chook, and J. Luban for critical reading of the manuscript in whole or in part. Special thanks go to H. Shio and E. Sphicas for excellent technical assistance in the electron microscopic studies. Our sincerest gratitude goes to E. Ellison, H. Ijikata, and Y. Oh for invaluable and skillful technical support that was essential for the completion of various parts of the work presented here.
Caterina Strambio-de-Castillia, Günter Blobel, Michael P. Rout; Proteins Connecting the Nuclear Pore Complex with the Nuclear Interior . J Cell Biol 8 March 1999; 144 (5): 839–855. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.144.5.839
Download citation file:
Sign in
Client Account
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your InstitutionEmail alerts
Advertisement
Advertisement