Characterization of the membrane binding and fusion events during nuclear envelope assembly using purified components.
Open Access
- 15 January 1992
- journal article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of cell biology
- Vol. 116 (2) , 295-306
- https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.116.2.295
Abstract
At the end of mitosis membrane vesicles are targeted to the surface of chromatin and fuse to form a continuous nuclear envelope. To investigate the molecular mechanisms underlying these steps in nuclear envelope assembly, we have developed a defined cell-free system in which the binding and fusion steps in nuclear envelope assembly can be examined separately. We have found that extensively boiled Xenopus egg extracts efficiently promote the decondensation of demembranated Xenopus sperm chromatin. When isolated membranes are added to this decondensed chromatin a specific subfraction of membrane vesicles (approximately 70 nM in diameter) bind to the chromatin, but these vesicles do not fuse to each other. Vesicle binding is independent of ATP and insensitive to N-ethylmalamide. Quantitative analysis of these sites by EM suggests that there is at least one vesicle binding site per 100 kb of chromosomal DNA. We show by tryptic digestion that vesicle-chromatin association requires proteins on both the vesicle and on the chromatin. In addition, we show that the vesicles bound under these conditions will fuse into an intact nuclear envelope when incubated with the soluble fraction of a Xenopus egg nuclear assembly extract. With respect to vesicle fusion, we have found that vesicles prebound to chromatin will fuse to each other when ATP and GTP are present in the boiled extract. These results indicate that nuclear envelope assembly is mediated by a subset of approximately 70-nM-diam vesicles which bind to chromatin sites spaced 100 kb apart and that fusion of these vesicles is regulated by membrane-associated GTP-binding proteins.Keywords
This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
- Lamins A and C bind and assemble at the surface of mitotic chromosomes.The Journal of cell biology, 1990
- On the cell-free association of lamins A and C with metaphase chromosomesExperimental Cell Research, 1990
- Dissection of a single round of vesicular transport: Sequential intermediates for intercisternal movement in the Golgi stackCell, 1989
- Integral membrane proteins specific to the inner nuclear membrane and associated with the nuclear lamina.The Journal of cell biology, 1988
- A major 62-kD intranuclear matrix polypeptide is a component of metaphase chromosomes.The Journal of cell biology, 1988
- Role of an N-ethylmaleimide-sensitive transport component in promoting fusion of transport vesicles with cisternae of the Golgi stackCell, 1988
- A trypsin-sensitive receptor on membrane vesicles is required for nuclear envelope formation in vitro.The Journal of cell biology, 1988
- In vitro transport of a fluorescent nuclear protein and exclusion of non-nuclear proteins.The Journal of cell biology, 1986
- A new type of coated vesicular carrier that appears not to contain clathrin: Its possible role in protein transport within the Golgi stackCell, 1986
- Cell type-specific differences in protein composition of nuclear pore complex-lamina structures in oocytes and erythrocytes of Xenopus laevisJournal of Molecular Biology, 1981