Publication | Open Access
RAN/TC4 mutants identify a common requirement for snRNP and protein import into the nucleus.
117
Citations
58
References
1996
Year
Gtpase ActivityGeneticsMolecular BiologyRan/tc4 MutantsRan GtpaseMolecular GeneticsProtein SynthesisTranscriptional RegulationProtein FoldingGene StructureProteomicsRna ProcessingProtein FunctionBiochemistryProtein ImportProtein TransportGtp HydrolysisCommon RequirementGene ExpressionNatural SciencesMedicine
Kinetic competition experiments have demonstrated that at least some factors required for the nuclear import of proteins and U snRNPs are distinct. Both import processes require energy, and in the case of protein import, the energy requirement is known to be at least partly met by GTP hydrolysis by the Ran GTPase. We have compared the effects of nonhydrolyzable GTP analogues and two mutant Ran proteins on the nuclear import of proteins and U snRNPs in vitro. The mutant Ran proteins have different defects; Q69L (glutamine 69 changed to leucine) is defective in GTP hydrolysis while T24N (threonine 24 changed to asparagine) is defective in binding GTP. Both protein and snRNP import are sensitive either to the presence of the two mutant Ran proteins, which act as dominant negative inhibitors of nuclear import, or to incubation with nonhydrolyzable GTP analogues. This demonstrates that there is a requirement for a GTPase activity for the import of U snRNPs, as well as proteins, into the nucleus. The dominant negative effects of the two mutant Ran proteins indicate that the pathways of protein and snRNP import share at lease one common component.
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