Overlapping Signals for Protein Degradation and Nuclear Localization Define a Role for Intrinsic RAG-2 Nuclear Uptake in Dividing Cells
Open Access
- 1 August 2003
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 23 (15) , 5308-5319
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.23.15.5308-5319.2003
Abstract
Expression of the recombinase proteins RAG-1 and RAG-2 is discordant: while RAG-1 is relatively long lived, RAG-2 is degraded periodically at the G1-S transition. Destruction of RAG-2 is mediated by a conserved interval in the recombination-dispensable region. The need for RAG-2 to reaccumulate in the nucleus at each cell division suggested the existence of an intrinsic RAG-2 nuclear localization signal (NLS). RAG-1 or RAG-2, expressed individually, is a nuclear protein. A screen for proteins that bind the recombination-dispensable region of RAG-2 identified the nuclear transport protein Importin 5. Mutation of residues 499 to 508 in RAG-2 abolished Importin 5 binding, nuclear accumulation, and periodic degradation of RAG-2. The Importin 5 binding site overlaps an NLS, defined by mutagenesis. RAG-1 rescued the localization of degradation-defective, RAG-2 NLS mutants; this required an intact RAG-1 NLS. Mutations in RAG-2 that abolish intrinsic nuclear accumulation but spare periodic degradation impaired recombination in cycling cells; induction of quiescence restored recombination to wild-type levels. Recombination defects were correlated with a cell cycle-dependent defect in the ability of RAG-1 to rescue localization of the RAG-2 mutants. These results suggest that the intrinsic RAG-2 NLS functions in the nuclear uptake of RAG-2 following its reexpression in cycling cells.Keywords
This publication has 54 references indexed in Scilit:
- V(D)J Recombination: RAG Proteins, Repair Factors, and RegulationAnnual Review of Biochemistry, 2002
- Mutational Analysis of All Conserved Basic Amino Acids in RAG-1 Reveals Catalytic, Step Arrest, and Joining-Deficient Mutants in the V(D)J RecombinaseMolecular and Cellular Biology, 2002
- Separation-of-Function Mutants Reveal Critical Roles for RAG2 in Both the Cleavage and Joining Steps of V(D)J RecombinationMolecular Cell, 2001
- Transport Between the Cell Nucleus and the CytoplasmAnnual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, 1999
- Importin beta , transportin, RanBP5 and RanBP7 mediate nuclear import of ribosomal proteins in mammalian cellsThe EMBO Journal, 1998
- Complementation of V(D)J Recombination Deficiency in RAG-1−/− B Cells Reveals a Requirement for Novel Elements in the N-Terminus of RAG-1Immunity, 1997
- Regions of RAG1 protein critical for V(D)J recombinationEuropean Journal of Immunology, 1996
- RAG-2-deficient mice lack mature lymphocytes owing to inability to initiate V(D)J rearrangementCell, 1992
- RAG-1 and RAG-2, Adjacent Genes That Synergistically Activate V(D)J RecombinationScience, 1990
- The defect in murine severe combined immune deficiency: Joining of signal sequences but not coding segments in V(D)J recombinationCell, 1988