Nucleolar Trafficking of Nucleostemin Family Proteins: Common versus Protein-Specific Mechanisms
- 1 December 2007
- journal article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Molecular and Cellular Biology
- Vol. 27 (24) , 8670-8682
- https://doi.org/10.1128/mcb.00635-07
Abstract
The nucleolus has begun to emerge as a subnuclear organelle capable of modulating the activities of nuclear proteins in a dynamic and cell type-dependent manner. It remains unclear whether one can extrapolate a rule that predicts the nucleolar localization of multiple proteins based on protein sequence. Here, we address this issue by determining the shared and unique mechanisms that regulate the static and dynamic distributions of a family of nucleolar GTP-binding proteins, consisting of nucleostemin (NS), guanine nucleotide binding protein-like 3 (GNL3L), and Ngp1. The nucleolar residence of GNL3L is short and primarily controlled by its basic-coiled-coil domain, whereas the nucleolar residence of NS and Ngp1 is long and requires the basic and the GTP-binding domains, the latter of which functions as a retention signal. All three proteins contain a nucleoplasmic localization signal (NpLS) that prevents their nucleolar accumulation. Unlike that of the basic domain, the activity of NpLS is dynamically controlled by the GTP-binding domain. The nucleolar retention and the NpLS-regulating functions of the G domain involve specific residues that cannot be predicted by overall protein homology. This work reveals common and protein-specific mechanisms underlying the nucleolar movement of NS family proteins.Keywords
This publication has 45 references indexed in Scilit:
- PML regulates p53 stability by sequestering Mdm2 to the nucleolusNature Cell Biology, 2004
- HIF activation by pH-dependent nucleolar sequestration of VHLNature Cell Biology, 2004
- Cajal body proteins SMN and Coilin show differential dynamic behaviour in vivoJournal of Cell Science, 2003
- Pre-ribosomes on the road from the nucleolus to the cytoplasmTrends in Cell Biology, 2003
- Targeting genes and transcription factors to segregated nuclear compartmentsCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 2003
- A nucleolar mechanism controlling cell proliferation in stem cells and cancer cellsGenes & Development, 2002
- Subnuclear shuttling of human telomerase induced by transformation and DNA damageNature Cell Biology, 2002
- YjeQ, an Essential, Conserved, Uncharacterized Protein from Escherichia coli, Is an Unusual GTPase with Circularly Permuted G-Motifs and Marked Burst KineticsBiochemistry, 2002
- Cooperative Signals Governing ARF-Mdm2 Interaction and Nucleolar Localization of the ComplexMolecular and Cellular Biology, 2000
- An Alternating Least Squares Approach to Inferring Phylogenies from Pairwise DistancesSystematic Biology, 1997