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Nucleocytoplasmic Communication

Nup50, a Nucleoplasmically Oriented Nucleoporin with a Role in Nuclear Protein Export

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 5619-5630 | Received 01 Feb 2000, Accepted 19 Apr 2000, Published online: 28 Mar 2023
 

Abstract

We present here a detailed analysis of a rat polypeptide termed Nup50 (formerly NPAP60) that was previously found to be associated with the nuclear pore complex (F. Fan et al., Genomics 40:444–453, 1997). We have found that Nup50 (and/or a related 70-kDa polypeptide) is present in numerous rat cells and tissues. By immunofluorescence microscopy, Nup50 was found to be highly concentrated at the nuclear envelope of rat liver nuclei, whereas in cultured NRK cells it also is abundant in intranuclear regions. On the basis of immunogold electron microscopy of both rat liver nuclear envelopes and NRK cells, we determined that Nup50 is specifically localized in the nucleoplasmic fibrils of the pore complex. Microinjection of anti-Nup50 antibodies into the nucleus of NRK cells resulted in strong inhibition of nuclear export of a protein containing a leucine-rich nuclear export sequence, whereas nuclear import of a protein containing a classical nuclear localization sequence was unaffected. Correspondingly, CRM1, the export receptor for leucine-rich export sequences, directly bound to a fragment of Nup50 in vitro, whereas several other import and export receptors did not significantly interact with this fragment. Taken together, our data indicate that Nup50 has a direct role in nuclear protein export and probably serves as a binding site on the nuclear side of the pore complex for export receptor-cargo complexes.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by a grant from Novartis Pharmaceuticals to L.G., NIH postdoctoral fellowship F32 GM19085 to E.C.S., and NIH grant GM36745 to N.A. B.E.C. is a W. M. Keck Distinguished Young Scholar in Medical Research and is a scholar of the James S. McDonnell Foundation.

We gratefully acknowledge the gifts of cDNA clones from Susan Taylor, Iain Mattaj, and Dirk Görlich.

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