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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 1998, p. 6805-6815, Vol. 18, No. 11
0270-7306/98/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Cse1p Is Involved in Export of Yeast Importin
from the
Nucleus
Jens
Solsbacher,1
Patrick
Maurer,1
F. Ralf
Bischoff,2 and
Gabriel
Schlenstedt1,*
Medizinische Biochemie, Universität des
Saarlandes, 66421 Homburg,1 and
Abteilung Molekulare Biologie der Mitose, Deutsches
Krebsforschungszentrum, 69120 Heidelberg,2
Germany
Received 13 April 1998/Returned for modification 25 May
1998/Accepted 6 August 1998
 |
ABSTRACT |
Proteins bearing a nuclear localization signal (NLS) are targeted
to the nucleus by the heterodimeric transporter importin. Importin
binds to the NLS and to importin
, which carries it through the
nuclear pore complex (NPC). Importin disassembles in the nucleus,
evidently by binding of RanGTP to importin
. The importin subunits
are exported separately. We investigated the role of Cse1p, the
Saccharomyces cerevisiae homologue of human CAS, in nuclear
export of Srp1p (yeast importin
). Cse1p is located predominantly in
the nucleus but also is present in the cytoplasm and at the NPC. We
analyzed the in vivo localization of the importin subunits fused to the
green fluorescent protein in wild-type and cse1-1 mutant
cells. Srp1p but not importin
accumulated in nuclei of
cse1-1 mutants, which are defective in NLS import but not
defective in NLS-independent import pathways. Purified Cse1p binds with high affinity to Srp1p only in the presence of RanGTP. The complex is
dissociated by the cytoplasmic RanGTP-binding protein Yrb1p. Combined
with the in vivo results, this suggests that a complex containing
Srp1p, Cse1p, and RanGTP is exported from the nucleus and is
subsequently disassembled in the cytoplasm by Yrb1p. The formation of
the trimeric Srp1p-Cse1p-RanGTP complex is inhibited by NLS peptides,
indicating that only NLS-free Srp1p will be exported to the cytoplasm.
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Transport of proteins and RNAs
between the cytoplasm and the nucleus across the nuclear pore complex
(NPC) is mediated by shuttling transport receptors. All transporters so
far identified belong to the importin
superfamily. Substrate
binding and release of these transporters are modulated by the small
GTPase Ran, the key regulator of nucleocytoplasmic transport. Several
specific transport pathways for different import and export substrates have recently been identified (reviewed in references
52 and 73).
The best understood transport pathway is the import of proteins
carrying a classical nuclear localization sequence (NLS), which is
characterized by a short segment of basic amino acid residues
(20). The NLS is recognized by importin
in the
cytoplasm, which in turn binds to importin
. Importin
mediates
docking at the NPC and subsequent transport into the nucleus. Docking of NLS substrates to the nuclear envelope and subsequent
energy-dependent transfer into the nucleus can be reconstituted with
recombinant factors and permeabilized cells in vitro. Two soluble
factors, Ran and p10, are sufficient to promote the translocation step (for reviews, see references 16, 32 and
50).
Ran is an abundant, mostly nuclear protein that switches between two
conformational states, i.e., bound to GDP (RanGDP) and to GTP (RanGTP).
The specific regulators of the Ran GTPase cycle, the cytoplasmic
GTPase-activating protein RanGAP1/Rna1p and the nuclear nucleotide
exchange factor RCC1/Prp20p, generate RanGDP in the cytoplasm and
RanGTP in the nucleus (reviewed in references 32 and
61). RanGTP binds to importin
, which is thereby
released from the NLS-importin complex (12, 33, 56). This
event is thought to represent import termination in the nucleus
(33, 52). Accordingly, a high level of nuclear RanGTP is
required for efficient import, whereas cytoplasmic RanGTP prevents
nuclear import (33, 40, 62, 74). RanGTP complexed to
importin
is completely resistant to GTP exchange and GTP hydrolysis
(21, 33, 63). Export of importin
from the nucleus does
not require GTP hydrolysis by Ran (40) and most likely
occurs in a complex with RanGTP but not in a complex with importin
(29, 75). Once in the cytoplasm, the importin
-RanGTP
complex has to be dissociated to allow initiation of a new import
cycle. This is achieved by importin
and RanBP1 in vitro (4,
22). Subsequently, the RanGAP converts RanGTP to RanGDP,
which prevents rebinding of RanGTP to importin
. RanBP1
contains a RanGTP-binding domain different from that of importin
.
Yrb1p, the yeast homologue of RanBP1, is an essential cytoplasmic
protein which is required for nucleocytoplasmic transport (reviewed in
reference 61).
Recently, a number of importin
-related proteins have been
identified which were postulated, and in part have been shown, to
represent novel transport receptors (24, 28). They are similar in size (95 to 125 kDa) and secondary structure, possess NPC-binding sites, and are homologous in their N-terminal domains, which mediate binding to RanGTP (13, 28, 45, 63). The members of the importin
superfamily can be divided into import receptors and export receptors. Import receptors different from importin
bind to their substrates directly without using an adapter
like importin
(1, 28, 55, 58, 63). Substrates identified
so far are mRNA-binding proteins for the import factors transportin/Kap104p and Mtr10p (1, 9, 25, 54, 55, 68),
ribosomal proteins for Yrb4p/Kap123p and Pse1p (58, 63), and
a protein involved in pre-tRNA processing for Sxm1p (57). Like importin
, other import receptors release their cargo by direct
binding to RanGTP. This was shown for transportin, Yrb4p/Kap123p, and
Pse1p (40, 63). Efficient dissociation of complexes
consisting of RanGTP and importin
-related receptors was shown to
require RanBP1/Yrb1p in vitro (4, 18, 22, 28, 48, 63).
In contrast to import receptors, export factors require simultaneous
association with RanGTP for high-affinity substrate binding (23,
44, 46). This allows cargo binding in the nucleus, where RanGTP
is present, and subsequent release into the cytoplasm, where RanBP1 and
RanGAP disassemble the export complex (44, 46). Three export
receptors have been described recently. Crm1p from various organisms
was identified as the exporter of proteins containing leucine-rich
nuclear export signals (NESs) occurring, e.g., in the human
immunodeficiency virus Rev protein and in the protein kinase A
inhibitor (23, 26, 53, 70). Exportin t, a human protein
similar to yeast Los1p (36, 37), was identified as the tRNA
exporter (46). The human CAS protein was shown to mediate
export of Rch1, a member of the importin
family, from the nucleus.
CAS binds to importin
and RanGTP in a cooperative manner and is
required for importin
export in vitro (44). Here we
characterize the Saccharomyces cerevisiae homologue of CAS,
the previously identified Cse1p, which is essential for viability (77). Cse1p forms a trimeric complex with Srp1p and the
GTP-bound form of Gsp1p (yeast Ran). Complex formation is prevented by
NLS peptides, indicating that only yeast importin
which has
released its NLS cargo will be exported to the cytoplasm. Export of
Srp1p from the nucleus and NLS-dependent nuclear import are inhibited in cse1 mutants. Our biochemical and in vivo data combined
suggest a function of Cse1p as the specific export receptor of yeast
importin
.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Plasmids and strains.
The strains used in this study are
listed in Table 1. All green fluorescent
protein (GFP) constructs were made with an S65T V163A mutant. To create
an SRP1-GFP fusion by homologous recombination by using the
pop-in/pop-out strategy (59), GFP was inserted into pRS306 (67) containing SRP1 (47,
78) with engineered restriction sites at the stop codon. This
plasmid (pGS288) was linearized with EcoRI and used for
transformation of the diploid wild-type strain GSY158 (63),
which resulted in GSY412 (pop-in strain). Integration at the
SRP1 locus was confirmed by Southern blotting. GSY412 was
passed over 5-fluoro-orotic acid plates, and tetrads were dissected to
isolate the pop-out strain GSY414. This strain was crossed to the
cse1-1 mutant strain Y1709 (77), and haploid
mutants containing integrated SRP1-GFP (GSY581) were isolated by tetrad dissection of the diploid. The in vivo localization of Srp1-GFP in the wild type was analyzed in the sister spore GSY591.
To construct a GFP-Kap95p fusion, GFP was inserted into pRS306 carrying the RSL1/KAP95 gene (42) with an
introduced BamHI site at the start codon of
RSL1/KAP95. This plasmid (pGS348), which contains a linker
encoding four glycines between GFP and RSL1/KAP95, was linearized in the coding region and used to
isolate the pop-in (GSY585) and pop-out (GSY586) strains as described above, except that haploid strains were used. GSY586 was crossed to
cse1-1, and a mutant expressing GFP-RSL1/KAP95
(GSY589) was isolated. CSE1 was cloned by PCR from genomic
DNA by using the oligonucleotides
5'-CGCGCGGCCGCTTCCAGGATGCTATATTACG-3' (GS60) and
5'-CGGCTCGAGCAGACCTATGTACTCCGCTGG-3' (GS61). All PCRs were performed with the proofreading Pwo polymerase (Boehringer Mannheim). The 3,240-bp PCR product was inserted first between the NotI
and XhoI sites of pBluescript (Stratagene), generating
pGS356. The strategy to obtain pop-in (GSY579) and pop-out (GSY580)
strains expressing GFP-CSE1 was as described for
GFP-RSL1/KAP95. The coding region of CSE1 plus
146 bp of 3' sequence was amplified with
5'-GCGGATCCATGTCCGATTTGGAAACCG-3' (GS62) and GS61, digested
with BamHI plus XhoI, and inserted behind the
GAL1 promoter of the URA3 plasmids YCpGAL and
YEpGAL (62), generating pGAL-CSE1 CEN (pGS364) or
pGAL-CSE1 2µm (pGS366). The RSL1/KAP95 coding sequence
(42) was similarly subcloned into YCpGAL, generating
YCpGAL-KAP95 (pGS305). The CSE1 coding sequence was
amplified with GS62 and 5'-GCGGATCCATTACCAACTAATAATTGATT-3' (GS63), digested with BamHI, and inserted in pGEX-4T
(Pharmacia) for expression in Escherichia coli. For
expression of a GST-Srp1p fusion in E. coli, the
SRP1 coding sequence was inserted into the BamHI
site of pGEX-5G (pGS388; a derivative of pGEX-4T encoding a
five-glycine linker at the C terminus of glutathione
S-transferase [GST]). The reporter plasmid
YEpGAL-NLS-GST-GFP (pGS420; 2µm URA3) was derived from
pGAL-NLS-GST, pGAL-GST (64), and a
BglII/BamHI fragment encoding GFP.
YCpGAL-NLS-GST-GFP (pGS422; CEN LEU2) carries the same
insert. Plasmid pGS304, encoding the N-terminal 49 amino acid residues
of L25 fused to
-galactosidase, was described before (63).
Protein analysis.
Cse1p and Srp1p were purified from
E. coli as GST fusions and cleaved with thrombin to remove
GST as described previously (64). The purification of
Schizosaccharomyces pombe Rna1p (6), Yrb1p,
GST-Gsp1p, and Gsp1p (15, 64) was described before. Labeling
of Gsp1p with [
-32P]GTP (6,000 Ci/mmol) and GTPase
assays were carried out as described previously (63). Gsp1p
bound to [
-32P]GTP (Gsp1p[
-32P]GTP)
was supplemented with the additions described in the figure legends and
incubated at 25°C. The total assay volume was 50 µl. Released
[32P]phosphate was determined by the charcoal method
(5). The control (100% hydrolysis) in the GTPase assays was
the released [32P]phosphate over the background level in
samples containing only Gsp1p[
-32P]GTP and Rna1p.
Solution binding assays were performed at 4°C in PBSKMT (25 mM sodium
phosphate, 150 mM NaCl, 3 mM KCl, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1% Tween
20, pH 7.3). To load Gsp1p with GTP or GDP, Gsp1p or GST-Gsp1p was
incubated for 60 min at 0°C with PBSKMT plus 2 mM EDTA in the
presence of 1 mM nucleotides, and then 6 mM MgCl2 was
added. GST-Gsp1p or GST-Srp1p was bound to 20 µl of
glutathione-Sepharose (Pharmacia) per reaction mixture for 1 h.
The binding reaction mixtures were then incubated for 1 h with the
factors indicated in the figure legends. The beads were washed four
times with 1 ml of PBSKMT, and bound proteins were eluted with sodium
dodecyl sulfate (SDS) gel loading buffer.
Affinity purification of rabbit antibodies against recombinant Cse1p,
immunofluorescence microscopy and detection of poly(A)+ RNA
by in situ hybridization were performed as described previously (63). Affinity purification of antibodies against Kap95p and Srp1p was described before (31). Western blot analysis was
carried out according to the guidelines for the ECL kit (Amersham) with horseradish peroxidase-conjugated goat anti-rabbit immunoglobulin G
(IgG) (Sigma) as the secondary antibody.
The calculation of the cellular Cse1p concentration was based on the
observation that 1.2 million cells contain approximately
12 ng of Cse1p
(purified Cse1p served as a standard in immunoblots
[not shown]) and
on previous determinations that a haploid yeast
cell contains 6 pg of
protein and has a volume of 70 µm
3 (
34).
 |
RESULTS |
In vivo localization of yeast importin
and
.
To analyze
the traffic of yeast importin
(Srp1p) and yeast importin
(Rsl1p/Kap95p) across the NPC in living S. cerevisiae cells,
we constructed fusion proteins with GFP. We genetically replaced the
importin genes by copies encoding Srp1-GFP or GFP-Kap95p. Immunoblot
analysis with antibodies against Srp1p, Kap95p, or GFP showed that the
respective GFP fusion proteins were present in the resulting strains
(Fig. 1A and C), which had growth
characteristics identical to those of wild-type strains (not shown).
This demonstrates that both fusion proteins are fully functional.

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FIG. 1.
Localization of importin and in living yeast
cells. (A) Lysates from wild-type cells (lanes 1 and 4), cells
containing an additional chromosomal copy of SRP1-GFP
(pop-in) (lanes 2 and 5), or cells containing only SRP1-GFP
(pop-out) (lanes 3 and 6) were analyzed by SDS gel electrophoresis and
immunoblotting with anti-Srp1 antibodies (lanes 1 to 3) or anti-GFP
antibodies (lanes 4 to 6). The sizes of molecular weight markers (in
thousands) are indicated. (B) Haploid cells containing
SRP1-GFP instead of SRP1 were grown in liquid
medium at 30°C. DAPI (2.5 µg/ml) was added to the culture. After 15 min, cells were viewed by fluorescence microscopy in the fluorescein
channel to visualize the GFP signal, in the UV channel to visualize
DAPI-stained DNA, or by Nomarski optics. (C) Lysates from wild-type
cells (lanes 1 and 4), cells additionally containing
GFP-RSL1/KAP95 (lanes 2 and 5), or cells containing only
GFP-RSL1/KAP95 (lanes 3 and 6) were analyzed by SDS gel
electrophoresis and immunoblotting with anti-Kap95 antibodies (lanes 1 to 3) or anti-GFP antibodies (lanes 4 to 6). (D) Cells expressing only
GFP-RSL1/KAP95 were grown in liquid medium. DAPI (2.5 µg/ml) was added to the culture. After 15 min, cells were viewed by
fluorescence microscopy to visualize GFP-Kap95p or DNA and by Nomarski
optics. Note that we used petite strains in panels B and D to minimize
staining of mitochondrial DNA.
|
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Next we examined the in vivo localization of the GFP fusions.
Logarithmically grown cells from liquid cultures were directly
viewed
by fluorescence microscopy. Both chimeras were evenly distributed
throughout the cell, concentrated around the nuclear envelope,
and
excluded from the vacuoles. The nuclei were identified by
costaining
with the DNA dye DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole).
In contrast to
the case for Kap95p, the concentration of Srp1p
in the nucleus appeared
to be somewhat higher than that in the
cytoplasm (Fig.
1B and D).
Divergent Srp1p and Kap95p localization
data were obtained by indirect
fluorescence microscopy before
(
2,
38,
42,
43,
78). These
variations (exclusive localization
at the nuclear envelope, the
nucleus, or the cytoplasm) are explained
by different fixation
conditions during sample preparation for
immunofluorescence microscopy
(
63). We compared the localizations
of the wild-type
importins and the respective GFP fusions and
observed identical
staining patterns by immunofluorescence microscopy
with anti-Srp1 or
anti-Kap95 antibodies and different fixation
protocols (not shown).
Therefore, the GFP moieties do not affect
the localization of
importin

and

.
cse1 mutants are defective in Srp1p export and NLS
import.
Mutations in factors involved in Srp1p transport across
the NPC are expected to affect the intracellular distribution of Srp1p. To test this, we crossed the strain containing integrated
SRP1-GFP against a number of mutants with defects in factors
potentially involved in Srp1p transport. We then analyzed the
localization of Srp1p in the resulting double mutants. The previously
reported nuclear accumulation of Srp1p in prp20-1 mutants
(42) was also observed with Srp1-GFP. Temperature-sensitive
rna1-1, npl4-1, npl4-2,
rat2-1, xpo1-1, rpb1-1, and
yrb2 alleles (15, 19, 35, 51, 70, 71) had no
effect on the Srp1p localization (not shown). However, cells carrying
the cold-sensitive cse1-1 allele (77) showed a
complete loss of cytoplasmic Srp1p and a concomitant nuclear
accumulation even at the permissive temperature of 30°C, indicating a
defect in Srp1p export (Fig. 2A to D). By immunofluorescence microscopy, no significant Srp1p mislocalization in
gsp1-1, gsp1-2, npl3-1,
pse1-1, rsl1-1, yrb1-1, and
yrb4 mutants (10, 42, 63-65, 76) was observed
(not shown), but again Srp1p was found exclusively in the nuclei of
cse1-1 mutants (Fig. 3I to L).

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FIG. 2.
Srp1p but not Kap95p accumulates in the nuclei of
cse1-1 mutants. Wild-type (wt) (GSY591) or cse1-1
(GSY581) cells expressing SRP1-GFP (A to D) and wild-type
(GSY586) or cse1-1 (GSY589) cells expressing
GFP-RSL1/KAP95 (E to H), grown at 30°C, were viewed by
fluorescence microscopy to detect the GFP signal or by Nomarski
optics.
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FIG. 3.
Nuclear import of Npl3p and L25 is not affected in
cse1-1 mutants. Wild-type (wt) (GSY155) or cse1-1
(Y1709) cells carrying no plasmid (A to D and I to L) or carrying
plasmid pGS304 encoding L251-49- -galactosidase (E to
H), grown at 30°C, were prepared for immunofluorescence microscopy by
formaldehyde fixation. They were then incubated with antibodies against
Npl3p (A to D), or -galactosidase ( gal) (Promega) (E to H), or
Srp1p (I to L) and then with Texas red-conjugated secondary antibodies
(Jackson) and with DAPI.
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|
Cse1p (predicted molecular mass, 109.3 kDa) belongs to the importin

superfamily. It has an overall identity of 17.1 to 18.8%
with Kap95p,
Kap104p, Yrb4p/Kap123p, Pse1p, Mtr10p, Los1p, or
Crm1p/Xpo1p (aligned
by the FASTA algorithm). Cse1p shows significant
homology to the human
CAS protein (36% identity and 67% similarity)
and is therefore
regarded as the yeast homologue of CAS (
11).
Cse1p was
reported earlier to play a role in chromosome segregation
during
mitosis (
77). By quantitative immunoblotting with purified
Cse1p as a standard, we calculated that Cse1p represents approximately
0.16% of the total cellular protein; i.e., roughly 55,000 molecules
are present in a haploid yeast cell (not shown).
Mutant
cse1-1 cells streaked on plates containing rich
medium did not grow when incubated at 15°C for 14 days but were
rescued
by plasmids carrying the
CSE1 gene (Fig.
4A). We confirmed the
previous
observation (cited in reference
77) that the mutant
is suppressed by
SRP1 overexpression.
cse1-1
cells transformed
with 2µm plasmids containing the
SRP1
gene grew comparably to
wild-type cells (Fig.
4A). We next localized
various proteins
in the
cse1-1 mutant to examine
nucleocytoplasmic transport. Cells
were grown at the permissive
temperature of 30°C in liquid medium
and then shifted to 15°C for
24 h. Under these conditions, the
mutant exhibits a growth rate
similar to that of the wild type
for more than 48 h (not shown).
To test whether Kap95p also mislocalizes
in
cse1-1 mutants,
we used a strain carrying the integrated
GFP-KAP95 allele.
Fluorescence microscopy showed that the localization of
GFP-Kap95p is
the same in
cse1-1 cells and wild-type cells at
30°C (Fig.
2E to H) or at 15°C (not shown), indicating that nuclear
export of
Kap95p is not affected. We next examined the intracellular
distribution
of endogenous proteins by immunofluorescence microscopy.
The
localizations of nuclear Npl3p (
10) (Fig.
3A to D),
cytoplasmic
Yrb1p (
64), and nucleolar Nop1p (
72)
(not shown) were not
changed in
cse1-1 mutants at any
temperature tested. The mutant
also shows a normal distribution of
poly(A)
+ RNA, which indicates that mRNA export is not
inhibited (not shown).

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FIG. 4.
NLS import is defective in cse1-1 mutants.
(A) cse1-1 cells (Y1709) transformed with a 2µm vector as
a control or with SRP1 2µm, CSE1 2µm, or
CSE1 CEN plasmids were streaked on YPD plates and incubated
for 2 days at 30°C or for 14 days at 15°C. (B) cse1-1
cells carrying YEpGAL-NLS-GST-GFP were transformed with a
CEN vector or a CSE1 CEN plasmid. Cultures were
grown in selective medium containing raffinose, and then 2% galactose
was added and the cultures were split. One half was further incubated
at 30°C for 3 h, and one half was incubated at 15°C for
24 h. NLS-GST-GFP was localized by fluorescence microscopy.
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Since Srp1p is needed in the cytoplasm for import of NLS proteins,
nuclear accumulation of Srp1p could result in an NLS import
defect. To
test this, we transformed
cse1-1 mutants with plasmids
encoding a protein containing the simian virus 40 (SV40)
large-T-antigen
NLS fused to GST and GFP (NLS-GST-GFP; molecular mass,
58.3 kDa).
This reporter was located exclusively in the nuclei of
wild-type
cells or
cse1-1 cells complemented with
CSE1 plasmids at all temperatures
tested (Fig.
4B). However,
the reporter accumulated in the cytoplasm
of
cse1-1 cells,
indicating a defect in nuclear import. The NLS
import defect was
already prominent at 30°C and was profound at
15°C (Fig.
4B).
Similar results were obtained with reporters containing
the histone H2B
NLS fused to

-galactosidase, the SV40 NLS fused
to cytoplasmic
invertase, or the SV40 NLS fused to

-galactosidase
(
63)
(not shown). We also tested a reporter protein containing
the nuclear
targeting signal of ribosomal protein L25 fused to

-galactosidase.
L25 import was shown to depend on Yrb4p/Kap123p
but not on importin
(
58,
63). The L25 reporter did not mislocalize
to the
cytoplasm in
cse1-1 mutants (Fig.
3E to H). In summary,
cse1-1 mutants show specifically a defect in importin

-dependent
NLS import. Parallel import pathways and export of mRNA
or importin

proceed normally during a shift to the nonpermissive
temperature
for 24 h.
CSE1 overexpression interferes with mRNA export in
wild-type cells.
To examine the effect of CSE1
overexpression on nucleocytoplasmic transport, we transformed wild-type
cells with centromeric (CEN) or high-copy (2µm) plasmids
containing the CSE1 coding sequence under control of the
inducible GAL1 promoter. A single-copy pGAL-KAP95 plasmid
encoding galactose-inducible Kap95p, which mediates a dominant-lethal
phenotype upon overexpression of RSL1/KAP95 (Fig. 5A), served as a control. Cells
transformed with pGAL-CSE1 2µm plasmids did not grow on
galactose-containing plates, indicating that CSE1
overexpression is lethal (Fig. 5A). Expression mediated by pGAL-CSE1
CEN plasmids inhibited growth but still allowed colony formation. Wild-type cells transformed with pGAL-CSE1 2µm plasmids or
pGAL-KAP95 CEN plasmids were grown in liquid medium, and
overexpression was induced by addition of 2% galactose. The growth
arrest was established ~8 h after galactose addition (Fig. 5B).
Immunoblot analysis showed that plasmid-encoded Cse1p and Kap95p were
expressed approximately fivefold over wild-type levels after 2 to
5 h (Fig. 5C).

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FIG. 5.
CSE1 overexpression blocks mRNA export. (A)
Wild-type cells (GSY155) were transformed with plasmid pGAL 2µm,
pGAL-KAP95 CEN, pGAL-CSE1 CEN, or pGAL-CSE1
2µm, streaked on plates containing glucose (no induction) or
galactose (induction), and incubated at 30°C for 2 days. (B) Cells
carrying plasmid pGAL, pGAL-CSE1 2µm, or pGAL-KAP95 CEN
were grown at 30°C in raffinose-containing medium. Expression was
induced by addition of galactose (2%), and growth rates were monitored
by measuring absorptions at 600 nm. (C) Extracts from cells
overexpressing CSE1 or RSL1/KAP95 for the
indicated times were analyzed by SDS gel electrophoresis and
immunoblotting with anti-Cse1 or anti-Kap95 antibodies. (D) Cells as
described for panel B, carrying YCpGAL-NLS-GST-GFP, were grown in
galactose for 2 h (pGAL-CSE1) or 3 h (pGAL and pGAL-KAP95).
The cells were either directly viewed by fluorescence microscopy to
detect NLS-GST-GFP or prepared for in situ hybridization to localize
mRNA and stained with DAPI.
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We then investigated whether
CSE1 and
RSL1/KAP95
overexpression affects nucleocytoplasmic traffic. A number of
endogenous
and plasmid-encoded proteins were localized microscopically
at
2, 3, or 5 h after galactose addition as described above. The
localization of Srp1p and Kap95p (both analyzed with the respective
GFP
fusions in vivo), Yrb1p, or Nop1p was unaffected under all
conditions
tested (not shown). The L25 reporter and Npl3p (not
shown), as well as
NLS-GST-GFP and all other reporter proteins
containing classical NLSs,
accumulated strongly in the cytoplasm
after
RSL1/KAP95
overexpression but were still nuclear after
CSE1 overexpression (Fig.
5D). To examine mRNA export, we localized
poly(A)
+ RNA under the same conditions. As expected,
polyadenylated RNA
was observed in the cytoplasm of wild-type cells
carrying a control
plasmid (Fig.
5D). However, all cells overexpressing
CSE1 accumulated
poly(A)
+ RNA completely in the
nucleus even 2 h after induction. Overexpression
of
RSL1/KAP95 for 2 to 5 h caused only an intermediate
inhibition
of mRNA export (Fig.
5D). We also tested whether
CSE1 overexpression
affects NES export but observed no
mislocalization of a reporter
(
70) containing the
leucine-rich NES of protein kinase A inhibitor
(PKI) (not shown). Taken
together, the data indicate that excess
amounts of Kap95p strongly
inhibit NLS import and import of Npl3p
and L25, probably by competition
for common import receptor binding
sites at the NPC, but do not block
mRNA export to a similar extent.
Overexpression of
CSE1, on
the other hand, does not interfere
with various protein import and
export pathways but blocks the
mRNA export pathway.
Localization of Cse1p.
To determine the intracellular
distribution of Cse1p, we generated a strain in which CSE1
is replaced by a GFP-CSE1 fusion. This strain grows normally
and encodes a functional GFP-Cse1p fusion which was detected by
immunoblotting with polyclonal anti-Cse1 antibodies or GFP-specific
antibodies (Fig. 6A). The
faster-migrating bands in Fig. 6A (lanes 1 to 3) probably represent
degradation products of Cse1p. Their intensity varies greatly in
different immunoblots, and they can be competed by purified recombinant Cse1p (not shown). GFP-Cse1p is located mainly in the nucleus, with
some localization in the cytoplasm (Fig. 6B). Nuclear rim staining was
prominent in some wild-type cells. To test whether this staining
corresponds to NPCs, we introduced the integrated GFP-CSE1
allele in rat2-1 mutants, which cluster their NPCs at one
side of the nuclear envelope (35). Most cells of this strain indeed show a concentration of GFP-Cse1p at a small region of the
nuclear envelope (Fig. 6B). The presence of Cse1p at the NPC was also
shown by double-labeling immunofluorescence experiments. Here, the
cells were prepared by methanol fixation, which results in a loss of
most of the cytoplasmic content (63). Using the monoclonal
antibody 414, which recognizes NPC antigens (17), and
anti-GFP, we observed colocalization of NPCs and GFP-Cse1p in wild-type
cells and rat2-1 cells (Fig.
7A).

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FIG. 6.
In vivo localization of Cse1p. (A) Lysates from
wild-type cells (lanes 1 and 4), cells additionally containing
GFP-CSE1 (lanes 2 and 5), or cells containing only
GFP-CSE1 (lanes 3 and 6) were analyzed by SDS gel
electrophoresis and immunoblotting with affinity-purified anti-Cse1
antibodies (lanes 1 to 3) or anti-GFP antibodies (lanes 4 to 6). The
sizes of molecular weight markers (in thousands) are indicated. (B)
Wild-type (wt) or rat2-1 cells expressing GFP-Cse1p (GSY580
and GSY587, respectively) were grown at 25°C in liquid medium and
viewed by fluorescence microscopy and by Nomarski optics.
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|

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FIG. 7.
Immunolocalization of Cse1p. (A) Wild-type (wt) or
rat2-1 cells expressing GFP-Cse1p, grown at 25°C, were
prepared for immunofluorescence microscopy by methanol fixation, probed
with rabbit anti-GFP antibodies (Clontech) and mouse monoclonal
antibody 414 (Berkeley Antibodies Co.), and then incubated with
fluorescein isothiocyanate-conjugated anti-rabbit IgG and Texas
Red-anti-mouse IgG secondary antibodies (Jackson) and stained with
DAPI. (B) Wild-type cells expressing Cse1p or GFP-Cse1p were grown at
30°C and prepared for immunofluorescence microscopy by formaldehyde
fixation. The cells were incubated with affinity-purified anti-Cse1
antibodies and then incubated with Texas Red-anti-rabbit IgG and
stained with DAPI.
|
|
We also used affinity-purified anti-Cse1 antibodies to localize Cse1p
and GFP-Cse1p in wild-type cells by immunofluorescence
microscopy. In
methanol-fixed cells, we observed punctate nuclear
rim staining,
indicating a nucleoporin-like localization (not
shown). This
staining was identical to the anti-GFP staining of
GFP-Cse1p shown in
Fig.
7A. In formaldehyde-fixed cells, with
anti-GFP antibodies (not
shown) or anti-Cse1 antibodies (Fig.
7B), both proteins gave
cytoplasmic staining and a stronger labeling
of the nucleus, but
staining of the nuclear envelope was observed
only occasionally. The
localization of Cse1p in the
cse1-1 mutant
was similar
to that of wild-type Cse1p, but the mutant protein
was less
nuclear (Fig.
7B).
Cse1p forms a complex with RanGTP and Srp1p.
The Srp1p export
and NLS import defects of the cse1-1 mutant, the
localization of Cse1p, the presence of an importin
-like Ran-binding
domain at the N terminus of Cse1p (28), and the homology to
CAS together suggest that Cse1p represents the specific nuclear export
receptor of Srp1p. Human CAS was recently shown to mediate export of
importin
in vitro and to form a trimeric complex with RanGTP and
importin
(44) which probably represents the complex
exported from the nucleus. For Kap95p, Yrb4p/Kap123p, and Pse1p, it was
previously shown that binding to the GTP-bound form of Gsp1p (yeast
Ran) blocks hydrolysis and exchange of the Gsp1p-bound GTP (21,
63). Therefore, we used the inhibition of Rna1p-induced GTPase
activation as an assay to characterize interactions between Gsp1p,
Cse1p, and Srp1p.
When Gsp1p loaded with [

-
32P]GTP was incubated with
recombinant Cse1p, no GTPase inhibition was observed, indicating that
the
two proteins do not tightly interact under these conditions.
However,
in the presence of a high Srp1p concentration, Cse1p inhibited
the GTPase activity of Gsp1p in a concentration-dependent manner
(Fig.
8A). This inhibition was also
observed when the Srp1p concentration
was varied at a
constant concentration of Cse1p (not shown). No
GTPase block was
obtained when Srp1p and Yrb1p were added simultaneously
(see below). We
conclude that a trimeric complex consisting of
Gsp1p, Cse1p, and Srp1p
was formed and that the binding of Gsp1pGTP
and Srp1p to Cse1p is
highly cooperative. We suggest a constant
of approximately 1 nM for the
dissociation of Gsp1pGTP from the
Gsp1pGTP-Cse1p-Srp1p complex. In
parallel experiments, the dissociation
constant for a complex
consisting of Srp1p, Cse1p, and human RanGTP
was approximately 15 nM
(not shown).

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FIG. 8.
Gsp1pGTP complexed to Cse1p and Srp1p is resistant to
Rna1p-induced GTP hydrolysis. (A) Srp1p is required for efficient
binding of Gsp1pGTP to Cse1p. Gsp1p[ -32P]GTP (50 pM)
was incubated for 30 min with buffer, with Cse1p at the final
concentrations indicated, or with Cse1p and Srp1p (400 nM). Yrb1p (300 nM) was then added to the indicated samples. After 1 min, the GTPase
reaction was started by addition of Rna1p (20 nM). Hydrolysis of GTP by
Gsp1p was determined as released [32P]phosphate after 2 min by the charcoal method. A 50% inhibition of GTP hydrolysis
required 0.7 nM Cse1p (arrow). (B) Yrb1p dissociates the
Cse1p-Gsp1pGTP-Srp1p complex in the presence of Rna1p.
Gsp1p[ -32P]GTP (50 pM) was incubated for 30 min with
Cse1p (10 nM) and Srp1p (400 nM). Rna1p (20 nM) and then Yrb1p at the
final concentrations indicated were added. Released
[32P]phosphate was determined after further incubation
for 2 min. (C) NLS peptides inhibit the formation of the trimeric
complex. Gsp1p[ -32P]GTP (50 pM) was preincubated for
30 min with Srp1p (3 nM) and peptides corresponding to the SV40
large-T-antigen NLS (CTPPKKKRKV) or mutant NLS peptides
(CTPPKTKRKV) at the concentrations indicated. Cse1p (90 nM)
was then added, and the reaction mixtures were further incubated for 5 min. The GTPase reaction was started by addition of Rna1p (20 nM).
After 2 min, released [32P]phosphate was determined.
|
|
We have previously reported that Gsp1pGTP-Yrb4p and Gsp1pGTP-Pse1p
complexes are disassembled by Yrb1p in the presence of
Rna1p. Because
Yrb1p and Rna1p are both cytoplasmic proteins,
this was interpreted as
a cytoplasmic event allowing recycling
of the transport factors after
export through the NPC (
63).
Figure
8B shows that Yrb1p also
dissociates the Gsp1p-Cse1p-Srp1p
complex in the presence of Rna1p. We
incubated Gsp1p[

-
32P]GTP with concentrations of Cse1p
and Srp1p allowing complex
formation, which is indicated by complete
GTPase inhibition. Subsequent
addition of Yrb1p resulted in an
efficient stimulation of GTP
hydrolysis by Gsp1p. Since Cse1p (see
below) and Yrb1p (
63,
64) have no detectable affinity for
Gsp1pGDP, Yrb1p will cause
a complete disassembly of the complex when
Rna1p is also present.
Since it can be expected that Srp1p will return to the cytoplasm after
it has released the NLS substrate into the nucleus,
we next
investigated whether Srp1p, like the vertebrate importin

(
44), preferentially binds to Cse1p in its NLS-free form.
To
test this, we preincubated Gsp1pGTP and Srp1p with synthetic
peptides
corresponding to the SV40 large-T-antigen NLS or a nonfunctional
mutated NLS as a control (
27). In this experiment, we used
limiting
concentrations of Srp1p. Addition of Cse1p resulted in
complete
GTPase inhibition in the absence of peptides. NLS peptides,
however,
prevented the GTPase block in a concentration-dependent manner
by sequestering Srp1p (Fig.
8C). Relatively high concentrations
of NLS
peptides were needed to drive Srp1p quantitatively to the
NLS-bound
form. This might be due to the low NLS binding affinity
of importin

in the absence of importin

(
14,
30,
56).
A
1,000-fold-higher concentration of mutant NLS peptides was required
to
achieve a similar extent of GTPase activation (Fig.
8C). We
conclude
that Cse1p preferentially binds to NLS-free Srp1p. The
observed
inhibition of the complex formation could also arise
from direct
binding of NLS peptides to Cse1p. We consider this
very unlikely, since
the mutant NLS has nearly no effect.
To investigate the formation of the trimeric Gsp1p-Cse1p-Srp1p complex
in the absence of Rna1p, we performed solution binding
assays. A fusion
protein consisting of GST and Gsp1p was immobilized
via the GST tag to
glutathione-Sepharose. We then added Cse1p
and/or Srp1p and tested for
binding to Gsp1p. GST-Gsp1pGTP did
not efficiently bind to either Cse1p
or Srp1p alone (Fig.
9A,
lanes 6 and 7).
However, when Cse1p and Srp1p were added together,
they both bound
efficiently (Fig.
9A, lane 8). No binding to GST-Gsp1pGDP
was observed
(Fig.
9A, lane 9), indicating that complex formation
is specific for
the GTP-bound form of Gsp1p. Preincubation of
Srp1p with NLS peptides
strongly inhibited binding of Srp1p and
Cse1p, whereas mutant NLS
peptides did not disturb complex formation
(Fig.
9A, lanes 10 and 11).
The concentration of Cse1p in these
assays was 18 µM (for comparison,
we estimated that the concentration
of Cse1p in the nuclei of living
cells is approximately 12 µM).
We then examined the effect of Yrb1p
and Rna1p on the dissociation
of the trimeric complex. To test this,
Cse1p and Srp1p were prebound
to immobilized GST-Gsp1pGTP, unbound
proteins were removed by
washing, and then Rna1p or Yrb1p was added.
Remarkably, Yrb1p
alone released the majority of Cse1p and Srp1p. As
expected, Yrb1p
itself bound efficiently to Gsp1pGTP (Fig.
9A, lane
13). Rna1p
alone had no effect, which confirms that Gsp1p-bound GTP is
inaccessible
to the GTPase-activating protein (Fig.
9A, lane 15). When
Yrb1p
and Rna1p combined were added to the preformed complex, Cse1p
and
Srp1p were completely released. Yrb1p was also released, indicating
that now GTP hydrolysis had occurred (Fig.
9A, lane 14). Very
similar
results were obtained when immobilized GST-Srp1p was used
instead of
GST-Gsp1p (Fig.
9B). Cse1p binding required simultaneous
binding of
Gsp1pGTP but not Gsp1pGDP. NLS peptides abolished trimer
formation, and
Yrb1p alone disassembled the complex. Complex dissociation
by Yrb1p
alone required roughly equimolar amounts (Fig.
9B, lane
9). However, in
the presence of Rna1p, substoichiometric concentrations
of Yrb1p
induced complex disassembly (about 10-fold less Yrb1p
than Gsp1p was
present in lane 13), indicating that Yrb1p acts
catalytically.

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FIG. 9.
Formation and dissociation of the Cse1p-Gsp1pGTP-Srp1p
complex. (A) GST-Gsp1pGTP or GST-Gsp1pGDP (3 µg) immobilized to
glutathione-Sepharose was incubated with or without 6 µg of Cse1p and
4 µg of Srp1p in a total volume of 300 µl (lanes 5 to 15). Srp1p in
lanes 10 and 11 was preincubated with NLS peptides or mutant (mut.) NLS
peptides (0.45 mg/ml), respectively, for 30 min. The reaction mixtures
were incubated for 60 min, and unbound material was removed by four
washes. In lanes 12 to 15, the preformed Cse1p-Gsp1pGTP-Srp1p complex
was reisolated and further incubated for 10 min in a volume of 1 ml
with or without 2 µg of Yrb1p and 0.9 µg of Rna1p. Bound proteins
were analyzed by SDS gel electrophoresis and Coomassie blue staining.
Lanes 2 to 4 contain Cse1p, Srp1p, and Yrb1p, respectively,
corresponding to 50% of the load. The sizes of molecular weight
markers (lane 1) (in thousands) are indicated. (B) Immobilized
GST-Srp1p (3 µg) was incubated with 6 µg of Cse1p or 3 µg of
Gsp1p loaded with GTP or GDP and incubated as described for panel A. In
lanes 8 to 15, the preformed Cse1p-Gsp1pGTP-Srp1p complex was further
incubated for 20 min at 25°C with buffer, with 200 ng of Rna1p, or
with the indicated amounts of Yrb1p. Bound proteins were analyzed by
SDS gel electrophoresis and Coomassie blue staining. Lane 1, molecular
weight markers.
|
|
 |
DISCUSSION |
The data presented suggest that Cse1p represents the specific
export receptor of Srp1p. Our in vivo assays show that Srp1p but not
Kap95p accumulates in the nuclei of cse1-1 mutants. Nuclear accumulation is accompanied by an inhibition of NLS-dependent nuclear
import, suggesting that Srp1p becomes limiting for NLS import in the
cytoplasm. Other nuclear import pathways (import of Npl3p and L25)
proceed normally in cse1 mutants. This indicates that Srp1p
is a specific transport substrate for Cse1p, but we do not know if
other proteins are also exported by Cse1p. Overexpression of
SRP1 suppresses the temperature sensitivity of the
cse1-1 mutant, which demonstrates that the interaction with
Srp1p is an essential function of CSE1. Cse1p is localized
mainly in the nucleus but is also found in the cytoplasm and at the
NPC. Cse1p belongs to the importin
superfamily and binds to RanGTP,
and the interaction with Ran regulates substrate binding and release.
Cse1p is the functional homologue of CAS, which mediates export of
importin
in higher eukaryotes (44).
Cse1p binds to Srp1p and to RanGTP cooperatively; we did not detect
significant binding to Srp1p or RanGTP alone. However, Cse1p was shown
to bind to RanGTP in an overlay assay (28). Several
observations indicate that the Srp1p-Cse1p-RanGTP complex is formed in
the nucleus and is subsequently exported to the cytoplasm. Complex
formation requires RanGTP but not RanGDP, i.e., conditions which are
found in the nucleus. NLS-bound Srp1p does not bind to Cse1p and
RanGTP, probably because NLS-free Srp1p and NLS-bound Srp1p differ in
their conformational states. This indicates that the NLS protein is not
exported by Srp1p and Cse1p after Srp1p-mediated import and thus
explains the unidirectionality of NLS import (49, 66).
Ran-bound GTP in the Srp1p-Cse1p-RanGTP complex is protected from
hydrolysis. This prevents complex dissociation before the cytoplasmic
environment is reached. The trimeric complex is disassembled by the
cytoplasmic protein Yrb1p, which was shown to be essential for NLS
import, Npl3p import, and mRNA export in vivo (64). Yrb1p
and its mammalian homologue RanBP1 bind strongly to RanGTP and act as a
coactivator of the Ran GTPase in vitro (7, 64). Accumulating
evidence defines the main function of Yrb1p/RanBP1 as the universal
cytoplasmic dissociation factor for complexes consisting of RanGTP and
importin
-like receptors. Besides importin
and Cse1p, also
RanBP5, RanBP7, RanBP8, Yrb4p/Kap123p, Pse1p, transportin, exportin t,
and CAS complexed to RanGTP are targets for Yrb1p/RanBP1 (4, 18,
28, 44, 46, 63). We show that Yrb1p alone is sufficient for the
disassembly of the Srp1p-Cse1p-RanGTP complex and that Yrb1p acts
catalytically when Rna1p is also present. This indicates that
Rna1p-mediated GTP hydrolysis serves to prevent reformation of the
complex in the cytoplasm.
An inhibition of export of importin
from the nucleus was observed
before in mutants other than cse1-1 mutants. Conditions that
inhibit the Ran-specific GDP/GTP exchange factor also resulted in a
nuclear accumulation of importin
(8, 42). This is explained by a decrease of the nuclear concentration of RanGTP, which
impairs the formation of the trimeric export complex. Srp1p export was
also inhibited in an RSL1/KAP95 mutant defective in nuclear
export (38). We observed that overexpression of
CSE1 blocks mRNA export but does not affect Kap95p export,
Srp1p export, NES export, or several import pathways. However,
overexpression of RSL1/KAP95 primarily inhibits several
protein import pathways. This indicates that excess amounts of Kap95p
might compete with other import receptors for NPC binding sites. It is
unclear why CSE1 overexpression selectively inhibits mRNA
export and not export of, e.g., Srp1p. The mRNA export pathway might be
more sensitive to certain mutant conditions than other transport
pathways. Interestingly, we did not detect nuclear accumulation of
Srp1p in the rat2-1 mutant, which was identified in an mRNA
mislocalization screen (35). This nucleoporin mutant and the
RAT2/NUP120 deletion mutant show very similar phenotypes.
However, nuclear accumulation of Srp1p was reported for the deletion
mutant (2). This indicates that the RAT2/NUP120
gene product affects Srp1p export and mRNA export at different levels.
In cell lysates, about one-third of Srp1p was found in a stable complex
with the shuttling but mainly nucleus-located cap binding complex
(CBC), which consists of yCBP80 (Gcr3p) and yCBP20 (Mud13p). The strong
Srp1p-CBC interaction is mediated by an NLS in CBP80 (31).
This raises the question whether Srp1p is also exported from the
nucleus complexed to CBC. Since only NLS-free Srp1p will be exported by
Cse1p, a fraction of Srp1p could be exported by another pathway. U
snRNA export from the nucleus to the cytoplasm is mediated by an
interaction with CBC (41) and by the NES export receptor
Crm1p (23). In contrast to export of Rev and U snRNA,
however, importin
export is not affected by the potent Crm1
inhibitor leptomycin B in Xenopus oocytes (23). On the other hand, human importin
contains a sequence similar to a
leucine-rich NES which functions as an export signal when fused to a
reporter (8), but it is unclear whether Crm1p interacts with
this NES-like signal. We observed complete nuclear accumulation of
yeast importin
in cse1-1 mutants but did not detect even partial nuclear accumulation in xpo1-1 cells (shifted for up
to 3 h to the nonpermissive temperature) which are mutated in
yeast CRM1 (70). Furthermore, we did not detect
binding of Srp1p to Xpo1p/Crm1p in the presence or absence of RanGTP
(69). These observations together suggest that in contrast
to CBC complexed to U snRNA, importin
is not exported by the
CRM1 pathway.
Cse1p was reported to be involved in chromosome segregation during
mitosis (77). We did not test whether Cse1p plays a role in
spindle association (60) and/or chromosome segregation
(77). Cell cycle defects, which were also observed for the
srp1-31 mutant (47), can be explained by the
failure to import certain proteins into the nucleus. Cse1p was also
described to be involved in cyclin degradation. However, we found
genetically that the mutant designated cse1-22 in this
report (39) carries a temperature-sensitive mutation outside
CSE1 (not shown).
Our in vivo and in vitro experiments show that Cse1p is the functional
homologue of the human CAS protein, which mediates export of importin
from the nucleus in a reconstituted in vitro system with
permeabilized cells and recombinant transport factors (44).
Complex formation of Cse1p/CAS with RanGTP and NLS-free importin
as
well as disassembly by Yrb1p/RanBP1 have been conserved during
evolution. The major factors involved in the importin
transport
cycle are importin
, Ran and its regulators, Cse1p/CAS, and a number
of nucleoporins. NLS recognition by importin
starts in the
cytoplasm. NLS-bound importin
is imported into the nucleus by
importin
. RanGTP binds to importin
and thereby releases the
importin
-NLS protein complex. It is still unknown how the NLS
substrate dissociates from importin
. It seems that not
phosphorylation, as previously proposed (3), but again Ran
regulates this event. First, RanGTP-mediated release of importin
weakens the NLS-importin
interaction. Second, NLS-free importin
binds cooperatively to Cse1p/CAS and RanGTP, both of which are very
abundant in the nucleus. Thus, the trimeric complex constitutes a trap
for NLS-free importin
destined for export. In the cytoplasm,
disassembly of the trimeric complex is induced by Yrb1p/RanBP1.
Rna1p-mediated GTP hydrolysis then guarantees complete dissociation and
allows importin
to enter the next import cycle.
 |
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
We thank Andrew Schroeder for strains, Wolfgang Nastainczyk for
peptide synthesis, Dirk Görlich and Richard Zimmermann for helpful discussions, and Ellen Roth and Sandra Ruprecht for expert technical assistance.
This work was supported by grants from the Deutsche
Forschungsgemeinschaft.
 |
FOOTNOTES |
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address:
Universität des Saarlandes, Medizinische Biochemie, Geb. 44, D-66421 Homburg, Germany. Phone: 49-6841-166522. Fax: 49-6841-166288. E-mail: bcgsch{at}med-rz.uni-sb.de.
 |
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Molecular and Cellular Biology, November 1998, p. 6805-6815, Vol. 18, No. 11
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Copyright © 1998, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
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