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Identification of a protein complex that is required for nuclear protein import and mediates docking of import substrate to distinct nucleoporins.
435
Citations
19
References
1995
Year
Protein AssemblyMolecular BiologyNuclear Protein ImportNuclear Pore ComplexNuclear Import SubstrateImport SubstrateProtein ExpressionProteomicsCytosolic Subfraction AProtein FunctionBiochemistryNuclear OrganizationCell BiologyStructural BiologyProtein PhosphorylationSignal TransductionNatural SciencesCellular BiochemistryMedicineProtein Complex
We have identified and characterized a 9S protein complex from a Xenopus ovary cytosolic subfraction (fraction A) that constitutes this fraction's activity in recognizing a model nuclear import substrate and docking it at the nuclear pore complex. Because of its function, the complex is termed karyopherin. The 54- and 56-kDa subunits of the complex are termed alpha 1 and alpha 2, respectively, and the 97-kDa subunit is termed beta. In an alternative approach we have identified karyopherin beta from a rat liver cytosolic subfraction A by using immobilized rat nucleoporin Nup98 in a single, affinity-based enrichment step. We have molecularly cloned and sequenced rat karyopherin beta. Comparison with protein sequence data banks showed no significant similarity to other known proteins. Using nitrocellulose-immobilized rat liver nuclear envelope proteins and nuclear import substrate as a ligand, we found Xenopus fraction A-dependent binding to at least three bona fide nucleoporins (Nup214, Nup153, and Nup98) and to a candidate nucleoporin with an estimated molecular mass of 270 kDa. We propose that these nucleoporins function as docking proteins for karyopherin-mediated binding of substrate in a nuclear import/export pathway across the nuclear pore complex.
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