Importin/karyopherin protein family members required for mRNA export from the nucleus

  1. Matthias Seedorf and
  2. Pamela A. Silver
  1. Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Harvard Medical School and Dana–Farber Cancer Institute, 44 Binney Street, Boston, MA 02115

Abstract

The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains three proteins (Kap104p, Pse1p, and Kap123p) that share similarity to the 95-kDa β subunit of the nuclear transport factor importin (also termed karyopherin and encoded by KAP95/RSL1 in yeast). Proteins that contain nuclear localization sequences are recognized in the cytoplasm and delivered to the nucleus by the heterodimeric importin complex. A second importin-related protein, transportin, delivers a subset of heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoproteins (hnRNPs) to the nucleoplasm. We now show that in contrast to loss of importin β (Kap95p/Rsl1p) and transportin (Kap104p), conditional loss of Pse1p in a strain lacking Kap123p results in a specific block of mRNA export from the nucleus. Overexpression of Sxm1p, a protein related to Cse1p in yeast and to the human cellular apoptosis susceptibility protein, relieves the defects of cells lacking Pse1p and Kap123p. Thus, a major role of Pse1p, Kap123p, and Sxm1p may be nuclear export rather than import, suggesting a symmetrical relationship between these processes.

Footnotes

  • To whom reprint requests should be addressed.

  • Christine Guthrie, University of California, San Francisco, CA

  • ABBREVIATIONS:
    NLS,
    nuclear localization sequence;
    GFP,
    green fluorescent protein;
    SV40,
    simian virus 40;
    hnRNP,
    heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein;
    CAS,
    cellular apoptosis susceptibility protein
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