http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov –
The nuclear pore supports molecular communication between cytoplasm and
nucleus in eukaryotic cells. Selective transport of proteins is mediated by soluble
receptors, whose regulation by the small GTPase Ran leads to cargo
accumulation in, or depletion from, the nucleus, i.e., nuclear import or nuclear
export. We consider the operation of this transport system by a combined
analytical and experimental approach. Provocative predictions of a simple model
were tested using cell-free nuclei reconstituted in Xenopus egg extract, a system
well suited to quantitative studies. We found that accumulation capacity is
limited, so that introduction of one import cargo leads to egress of another.
Clearly, the pore per se does not determine transport directionality. Moreover,
different cargo reach a similar ratio of nuclear to cytoplasmic concentration
in steady-state. The model shows that this ratio should in fact be independent
of the receptor-cargo affinity, though kinetics may be strongly influenced.
Numerical conservation of the system components highlights a conflict between
the observations and the popular concept of transport cycles. We suggest
that chemical partitioning provides a framework to understand the capacity
to generate concentration gradients by equilibration of the receptor-cargo
intermediary. [DOI: 10.2976/1.3080807]
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Created by ruhollah
2 years 32 weeks ago
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Nuclear Pore Complex Tags: