نتایج جستجو برای: ژنهای importin

تعداد نتایج: 2350  

Journal: :The Journal of Cell Biology 2006
Weidong Yang Siegfried M. Musser

Although many components and reaction steps necessary for bidirectional transport across the nuclear envelope (NE) have been characterized, the mechanism and control of cargo migration through nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) remain poorly understood. Single-molecule fluorescence microscopy was used to track the movement of cargos before, during, and after their interactions with NPCs. At low impo...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 1997
M Seedorf P A Silver

The yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae contains three proteins (Kap104p, Pse1p, and Kap123p) that share similarity to the 95-kDa beta 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 s...

Journal: :Cell 1999
Sara Nakielny Gideon Dreyfuss

tors by the specific names used in their original descriptions. These receptors are generally large (90–130 kDa) Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6148 acidic proteins sharing 15%–25% sequence identity within a given organism. They all have an N-terminal RanGTP-binding domain, a C-terminal cargo-binding Eukaryotic cells are equipped with a machinery charged domain, and the capacity to bind compo...

2014
Percival Sangel Masahiro Oka Yoshihiro Yoneda

Members of the Importin-β family recognize nuclear localization signals (NLS) and nuclear export signals (NES). These proteins play important roles in various nucleocytoplasmic transport processes in cells. Here, we examined the expression patterns of 21 identified Importin-β genes in mouse embryonic stem cells (mESCs), mouse embryonic fibroblast (MEF) and mESCs differentiated into neural ectod...

2012
Kylie M. Wagstaff Haran Sivakumaran Steven M. Heaton David Harrich David A. Jans

The movement of proteins between the cytoplasm and nucleus mediated by the importin superfamily of proteins is essential to many cellular processes, including differentiation and development, and is critical to disease states such as viral disease and oncogenesis. We recently developed a high-throughput screen to identify specific and general inhibitors of protein nuclear import, from which ive...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 2007
Yan Ma Shang Cai Quanlong Lv Qing Jiang Quan Zhang Sodmergen Zhonghe Zhai Chuanmao Zhang

Lamin B receptor (LBR), a chromatin and lamin binding protein in the inner nuclear membrane, has been proposed to play a vital role in nuclear envelope (NE) assembly. But the specific role for LBR in NE assembly remains unknown. In the present study, we show that overexpression of LBR causes membrane overproduction, inducing NE invagination and membrane stack formation, and that these processes...

Journal: :Journal of structural biology 2009
Michael S Lee Frank J Lebeda Mark A Olson

Virus particle 24 (VP24) is the smallest protein of the Ebola and Marburg virus genomes. Recent experiments show that Ebola VP24 blocks binding of tyrosine-phosphorylated STAT-1 homodimer (PY-STAT1) to the NPI-1 subfamily of importin alpha, thereby preventing nuclear accumulation of this interferon-promoting transcription factor which, in turn, reduces the innate immune response of the host tar...

Journal: :The EMBO journal 1998
S Jäkel D Görlich

The assembly of eukaryotic ribosomal subunits takes place in the nucleolus and requires nuclear import of ribosomal proteins. We have studied this import in a mammalian system and found that the classical nuclear import pathway using the importin alpha/beta heterodimer apparently plays only a minor role. Instead, at least four importin beta-like transport receptors, namely importin beta itself,...

Journal: :Biochemical and biophysical research communications 2011
Hidemi Hirano Yoshiyuki Matsuura

The coordination of cytoskeletal actin dynamics with gene expression reprogramming is emerging as a crucial mechanism to control diverse cellular processes, including cell migration, differentiation and neuronal circuit assembly. The actin-binding transcriptional coactivator MAL (also known as MRTF-A/MKL1/BSAC) senses G-actin concentration and transduces Rho GTPase signals to serum response fac...

Journal: :Journal of cell science 2001
K A Dean O von Ahsen D Görlich H M Fried

The signal recognition particle (SRP) is a cytoplasmic RNA-protein complex that targets proteins to the rough endoplasmic reticulum. Although SRP functions in the cytoplasm, RNA microinjection and cDNA transfection experiments in animal cells, as well as genetic analyses in yeast, have indicated that SRP assembles in the nucleus. Nonetheless, the mechanisms responsible for nuclear-cytoplasmic t...

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