http://www3.interscience.wiley.com –
Transport through the nuclear pore complex (NPC), a
keystone of the eukaryotic building plan, is known to
involve a large channel and an abundance of phenylalanine–
glycine (FG) protein domains serving as binding
sites for soluble nuclear transport receptors and their
cargo complexes. However, the conformation of the FG
domains in vivo, their arrangement in relation to the
transport channel and their function(s) in transport are
still vividly debated. Here, we revisit a number of representative
transport models—specifically Brownian affinity
gating, selective phase gating, reversible FG domain
collapse, and reduction of dimensionality (ROD)—in the
light of new data obtained by optical single transporter
recording, optical superresolution microscopy, artificial
nanopores, and many other techniques. The analysis
suggests that a properly adapted, simplified version of
the ROD model accounts well for the available data. This
has implications for nucleocytoplasmic transport in general.
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Created by ruhollah
2 years 39 weeks ago –
Made popular 2 years 39 weeks ago
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Nuclear Pore Complex Tags: