Title: The nucleoporin Nup153 is required for nuclear pore basket formation, nuclear pore complex anchoring and import of a subset of nuclear proteins
Abstract: Article15 October 2001free access The nucleoporin Nup153 is required for nuclear pore basket formation, nuclear pore complex anchoring and import of a subset of nuclear proteins Tobias C. Walther Tobias C. Walther European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany Search for more papers by this author Maarten Fornerod Maarten Fornerod European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany Present address: Netherlands Cancer Institute – H4, Plesmanlaan 121, 1066 CX, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Search for more papers by this author Helen Pickersgill Helen Pickersgill CRC Department of Structural Cell Biology, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, Christie Hospital National Health Service Trust, Manchester, M20 9BX UK Search for more papers by this author Martin Goldberg Martin Goldberg CRC Department of Structural Cell Biology, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, Christie Hospital National Health Service Trust, Manchester, M20 9BX UK Search for more papers by this author Terry D. Allen Terry D. Allen CRC Department of Structural Cell Biology, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, Christie Hospital National Health Service Trust, Manchester, M20 9BX UK Search for more papers by this author Iain W. Mattaj Corresponding Author Iain W. Mattaj European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany Search for more papers by this author Tobias C. Walther Tobias C. Walther European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany Search for more papers by this author Maarten Fornerod Maarten Fornerod European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany Present address: Netherlands Cancer Institute – H4, Plesmanlaan 121, 1066 CX, Amsterdam, The Netherlands Search for more papers by this author Helen Pickersgill Helen Pickersgill CRC Department of Structural Cell Biology, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, Christie Hospital National Health Service Trust, Manchester, M20 9BX UK Search for more papers by this author Martin Goldberg Martin Goldberg CRC Department of Structural Cell Biology, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, Christie Hospital National Health Service Trust, Manchester, M20 9BX UK Search for more papers by this author Terry D. Allen Terry D. Allen CRC Department of Structural Cell Biology, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, Christie Hospital National Health Service Trust, Manchester, M20 9BX UK Search for more papers by this author Iain W. Mattaj Corresponding Author Iain W. Mattaj European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany Search for more papers by this author Author Information Tobias C. Walther1, Maarten Fornerod1,2, Helen Pickersgill3, Martin Goldberg3, Terry D. Allen3 and Iain W. Mattaj 1 1European Molecular Biology Laboratory, Meyerhofstrasse 1, D-69117 Heidelberg, Germany 2Present address: Netherlands Cancer Institute – H4, Plesmanlaan 121, 1066 CX, Amsterdam, The Netherlands 3CRC Department of Structural Cell Biology, Paterson Institute for Cancer Research, Christie Hospital National Health Service Trust, Manchester, M20 9BX UK *Corresponding author. E-mail: [email protected] The EMBO Journal (2001)20:5703-5714https://doi.org/10.1093/emboj/20.20.5703 PDFDownload PDF of article text and main figures. ToolsAdd to favoritesDownload CitationsTrack CitationsPermissions ShareFacebookTwitterLinked InMendeleyWechatReddit Figures & Info The nuclear pore complex (NPC) is a large proteinaceous structure through which bidirectional transport of macromolecules across the nuclear envelope (NE) takes place. Nup153 is a peripheral NPC component that has been implicated in protein and RNP transport and in the interaction of NPCs with the nuclear lamina. Here, Nup153 is localized by immunogold electron microscopy to a position on the nuclear ring of the NPC. Nuclear reconstitution is used to investigate the role of Nup153 in nucleo- cytoplasmic transport and NPC architecture. NPCs assembled in the absence of Nup153 lacked several nuclear basket components, were unevenly distributed in the NE and, unlike wild-type NPCs, were mobile within the NE. Importin α/β-mediated protein import into the nucleus was strongly reduced in the absence of Nup153, while transportin-mediated import was unaffected. This was due to a reduction in import complex translocation rather than to defective receptor recycling. Our results therefore reveal functions for Nup153 in NPC assembly, in anchoring NPCs within the NE and in mediating specific nuclear import events. Introduction Eukaryotic cells are characterized by their nuclear compartment, which provides a specialized environment for DNA replication, gene transcription and RNA processing. The nuclear envelope (NE) separates the nucleoplasm from the cytosol. Selective bidirectional traffic between the nucleus and the cytoplasm occurs through nuclear pore complexes, proteineacous structures of 125 MDa in vertebrates and 60 MDa in yeast (Reichelt et al., 1990; Yang et al., 1998). The NPCs are associated with intranuclear protein filaments (Franke and Scheer, 1970; Franke, 1970a,b; Maul, 1977; Cordes et al., 1993; Galy et al., 2000) and also contact the nuclear lamina, a meshwork of intermediate filaments underlying the NE (Akey, 1989; Goldberg and Allen, 1996). The lamina is thought to provide support for the NE and to mediate the attachment of the NE to interphase chromatin (for review see Gruenbaum et al., 2000). Vertebrate NPCs exhibit 8-fold rotational symmetry. Their structural features include the central spoke-ring assembly and associated peripheral structures. On both NPC faces the peripheral structures are anchored to the central spoke-ring complex via a coaxial ring. On the cytoplasmic side there are eight short filaments (∼50 nm; Franke and Scheer, 1970; Richardson et al., 1988) and on the nuclear face eight longer filaments of 3–6 nm in diameter, which are joined at the distal ring, located ∼100 nm from the mid-plane of the NE, to form the NPC basket (Ris, 1989, 1991; Jarnik and Aebi, 1991; Goldberg and Allen, 1992; Cordes et al., 1993). Extensive analysis of yeast NPCs has identified 30 different stable nucleoporin constituents (Rout et al., 2000). It is presently unclear whether the larger size of vertebrate NPCs is accounted for by a more complex composition or by other factors. Several subcomplexes of both yeast and vertebrate NPCs have been defined and shown to have non-identical functional roles (for review see Doye and Hurt, 1997; Ohno et al., 1998; Ryan and Wente, 2000). The effects of genetic depletion of a large number of yeast nucleoporins have been examined. Removal of individual nucleoporins has in this way been shown to specifically affect nuclear import or nuclear export pathways, the organization of the NE, the distribution of NPCs within the NE and aspects of intranuclear organization (Fabre and Hurt, 1997; Galy et al., 2000; Wente, 2000). In vertebrates, a very limited number of nucleoporins has also been analysed by genetic methods (van Deursen et al., 1996; Smitherman et al., 2000; von Kobbe et al., 2000; Wu et al., 2001). An alternative method, biochemical depletion of nucleoporins from Xenopus egg extract in which nuclear assembly on added chromatin templates takes place, has also been successfully applied to the production of nuclei whose NPCs lack specific components (Finlay and Forbes, 1990; Finlay et al., 1991; Powers et al., 1995; Grandi et al., 1997). The vertebrate studies have provided evidence for nucleoporin function in specific nucleocytoplasmic transport events (Finlay et al., 1991; van Deursen et al., 1996). Although some nucleoporins are well enough conserved to allow functional comparison between yeast and vertebrate homologues, many others are either poorly or not at all conserved across this evolutionary time span (Ohno et al., 1998). In addition, some gross organizational features of NPCs do not appear to be conserved. For example, while yeast NPCs have been reported to be mobile within the NE (Belgareh and Doye, 1997; Bucci and Wente, 1997), vertebrate NPCs are stably anchored in the membrane (Daigle et al., 2001). The vertebrate nucleoporin Nup153 has no identifiable yeast homologue, but has been implicated in various aspects of NPC function. Nup153 has been localized to the nuclear side of the NPC (Sukegawa and Blobel, 1993; Cordes et al., 1993), and at higher resolution to the distal ring of the basket structure (Pante et al., 1994). It has been suggested that Nup153 might link to either the nuclear lamina, the Tpr-containing intranuclear filaments or both (Cordes et al., 1993; Bastos et al., 1996; Ullman et al., 1999). Support for the former hypothesis came initially from Nup153 overexpression studies where, among other phenotypes, the formation of both lamina-containing structures and membrane arrays within the nucleus were seen (Bastos et al., 1996). More recently, evidence for a direct interaction between Nup153 and lamin LIII, the major lamin form present in Xenopus oocytes and eggs, has been obtained (Smythe et al., 2000). The primary structure of Nup153 can be roughly divided into three regions; a unique N-terminal region, a central domain consisting of four to five zinc fingers (depending upon species) and a C-terminal region containing ∼30 irregularly spaced FXFG repeats. Different classes of FG-containing repeats are found in many nucleoporins and often represent binding sites for nuclear import and export receptors (see Doye and Hurt, 1997; Ohno et al., 1998; Wente, 2000), and the C-terminal region of Nup153 has indeed been shown to interact with several such receptors (Moroianu et al., 1997; Shah and Forbes, 1998; Shah et al., 1998; Nakielny et al., 1999). Injection of anti-Nup153 antibodies into the nucleus of Xenopus oocytes blocked the nuclear export of most RNA substrates, but not tRNA (Ullman et al., 1999). Overexpression of the C-terminal domain of the protein in cultured somatic cells affected mRNA export (Bastos et al., 1996), while the addition of this region to nuclear import reactions inhibited importin α/β-mediated, but not transportin-mediated, import in vitro (Shah and Forbes, 1998). These studies were suggestive of a role for the C-terminal region in transport events, but could also be explained by a titration of importin β or other transport receptors in the reaction via their binding to the nucleoporin fragment. In agreement with this interpretation, Shah et al. (1998) reported an unusually stable complex between Nup153 and importin β in Xenopus egg extracts. The non-repetitive N-terminal region of Nup153 binds to the import receptor transportin (Shah and Forbes, 1998; Nakielny et al., 1999), which is responsible for the import of proteins like hnRNPA1 that carry a nuclear localization signal (NLS) of the M9 domain class (Pollard et al., 1996). The function of this interaction is likely to be in the import of Nup153 into the nucleus, a requirement for its incorporation into the NPC (Bastos et al., 1996; Enarson et al., 1998; Shah and Forbes, 1998; Nakielny et al., 1999). Nup153 interacts with homopolymeric RNAs in vitro (Ullman et al., 1999), and with DNA through its zinc finger domain (Sukegawa and Blobel 1993). The zinc finger region also interacts specifically with GDP-bound Ran (Nakielny et al., 1999). Ran is the GTPase that regulates transport receptor–transport cargo interaction and by so doing imposes directionality on nucleocytoplasmic transport (Mattaj and Englmeier, 1998; Görlich and Kutay, 1999). The functional significance of these Nup153 interactions is not yet clear. We wished to investigate the proposed roles of Nup153 by the assembly of nuclei whose NPCs lacked Nup153. We reasoned that the reported peripheral location of Nup153 on the nuclear basket would permit this to be achieved without greatly disrupting the assembly or internal structure of the NPC. Our data, however, reveal an important role for Nup153 in the stable incorporation of at least two other nucleoporins into the NPC. NPCs lacking Nup153 exhibit a lack of anchoring within the NE as well as specific defects in nuclear import. Results Nup 153 is located at the base of the nuclear basket Nup153 localization within the NPC has been examined previously (see Materials and methods). After affinity purification the antibodies recognized a single band on western blots, which was superimposable on Nup153 visualized by the well characterized monoclonal antibody (mAb)414 (data not shown). mAb414 has been shown to react with a series of FXFG repeat-containing nucleoporins, including Nup358/ RanBP2, Nup214/CAN, Nup153 and p62 (Davis and Blobel, 1987). The anti-xNup153 antibody was used to localize the protein on isolated Xenopus oocyte NEs by immunogold labelling and electron microscopy. We reasoned that the best resolution in the plane of the NE, and parallel to it, could be obtained by field emission in-lens scanning electron microscopy (FEISEM; Allen et al., 1997), and the best resolution perpendicular to the NE by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). To this end, spreads of NEs manually dissected from Xenopus oocytes were labelled with anti-Nup153 antibody and 10 nm colloidal gold-conjugated secondary antibody. After processing for FEISEM (see Materials and methods), individual NPCs were imaged at high resolution, and the mean distance of the colloidal gold from the centre of the NPC was determined to be 47.0 ± 8.8 nm (n = 100) (Figure 1A). A control with only secondary Ab showed no staining (data not shown). For TEM, samples were fixed after antibody labelling, and embedded in epoxy resin. Thin sections of 70 nm were imaged and mid-sections through the NPC were recorded. The distance of the gold particles from the mid-plane of the NE was determined to be 44.6 ± 13.9 nm (n = 84) (Figure 1B). Again, no significant labelling was observed in controls (data not shown). From the TEM micrographs, pictures of central sections were selected and the median radial position of the gold particles from the centre of the pore was determined to be 49.15 ± 14 nm. Statistical analysis (Mann–Whitney U test) showed that there was no significant difference from the localization obtained by FEISEM (P = 0.4149). Therefore the two data sets can be incorporated into a single model, and suggest a localization of Nup153 adjacent to the NE at the base of the nuclear pore basket or on the nucleoplasmic coaxial ring (Figure 1D). Figure 1.Localization of Nup153 within the NPC. Fixed Xenopus oocyte nuclear envelopes were incubated with affinity-purified anti-Nup153 primary antibody and 10 nm colloidal gold labelled secondary antibodies and analysed using electron microscopy. (A) Upper panel: representative FEISEM image of NPCs decorated with gold particles (false coloured yellow). Gold particles were identified using the backscatter electron image. Lower panel: distribution of distances to the centre of the NPC (in nm) of 100 NPC-associated gold particles. Bar, 100 nm. (B) Upper panel: representative TEM image of a stretch of nuclear envelope (NE) decorated with anti-Nup153 primary antibodies and gold labelled secondary antibodies. Bar, 100 nm. Lower panel: distribution of distances to the mid-plane of the NE (in nm) of 85 NE-associated gold particles. (C) Representative images of immunogold localization of Nup153 on NPCs after stripping of the nucleoplasmic basket. Bar, 100 nm. (D) Schematic representation of the localization of Nup153-specific gold labelling on a diagram of the NPC basket. Note that two antibody molecules (not shown in the diagram) are interposed between Nup153 and the gold particle. Bars indicate standard deviations of measurement. Download figure Download PowerPoint Recently the dimension of a single FXFG sequence has been reported to be as much as 2 nm (Bayliss et al., 2000). Given the fact that Nup153 contains ∼30 of these repeat sequences and that our antibody recognized the N-terminal region of Nup153, it was possible that Nup153 extended from the nuclear ring to the terminal distal ring of the NPC basket. To exclude this possibility, Xenopus NEs were treated with EDTA and with high salt to remove the nuclear baskets. After this treatment, immunogold labelling using the specific anti-Nup153 antibody was performed and FEISEM images examined. No nuclear baskets or residual nuclear filaments were visible. In spite of this loss of material the nuclear coaxial ring was labelled even more strongly than in the absence of treatment (2- to 3-fold increase in gold particles per NPC; Figure 1C and data not shown), indicating that the accessibility of the Nup153 epitope was increased. This very strongly suggests that Nup153 is part of the nucleo plasmic coaxial ring of the NPC. Depletion of nup153 from reconstituted nuclei In order to investigate the function of Nup153 we made use of nuclear assembly in extracts derived from activated Xenopus eggs. In this system a cytosolic fraction, a membrane fraction and an energy regenerating system combine to form a functional nucleus around exogenously added chromatin in vitro (Forbes et al., 1983; Lohka and Masui, 1983; Newport, 1987). In all our assays demembranated sperm were used as the source of chromatin. As described previously by Forbes and coworkers (Finlay and Forbes, 1990; Finlay et al., 1991; Powers et al., 1995; Grandi et al., 1997), nucleoporins can be immunodepleted from the soluble fraction and nuclei reconstituted whose NPCs lack the depleted nucleoporin(s). Figure 2A shows a western blot with mAb414 of all the component fractions of the assembly assay. Neither the membrane fraction nor the demembranated sperm contained detectable amounts of xNup153 (Figure 2A, lanes 4 and 5). The soluble extracts could be efficiently immunodepleted of xNup153 (Figure 2A, compare lanes 6 and 8), without significantly affecting the levels of the other FXFG repeat-containing Nups, Nup358/RanBP2, Nup214/CAN or p62. Figure 2.Generation of Nup153-deficient nuclei. (A) Western blot probed with mAb414. Left panel: 1 μl of recombinant hNup153 (lane 1) compared with 2 and 1 μl of undepleted Xenopus egg cytosol fraction (lanes 2 and 3). Right panel: 2 μl of Xenopus egg membrane fraction, 2 μl of sperm chromatin, 1 μl of either mock or Nup153-depleted nuclear assembly reaction with or without addition of recombinant human Nup153, as indicated above the lanes. Molecular weight markers (kDa) are shown on the left. Positions of mAb414-reactive nucleoporins are shown on the right. (B) Immunofluorescence staining of nuclei formed in the mock-depleted or the Nup153-depleted (ΔNup153) extracts using monospecific anti-Nup153 antibodies or monoclonal S49 against lamin LIII (Lourim and Krohne, 1993, 1998). As secondary antibodies, Alexa-546 conjugates were used (red). Decondensed sperm chromatin is stained with DAPI (blue). Bar, 10 μm. Download figure Download PowerPoint To test for the specificity of the effects of depletion in functional assays, we wished to add back recombinant Nup153 produced in Escherichia coli (Figure 2A). For this, human (h) Nup153, expressed as a GST fusion protein, was used, since the N-terminus of Xenopus Nup153 has not been sequenced to date and since we were unable to express the truncated xNup153 fragment in any expression system tested. The amount of recombinant hNup153 added back and its stability during the assembly reaction is shown in Figure 2A (lanes 1, 7 and 9). The lack of detectable xNup153 in a nucleus assembled in Nup153-depleted extract was demonstrated by immunofluorescence (Figure 2B, top panels). Depletion of Nup153 leads to clustering of NPCs During the course of the characterization of Nup153-depleted nuclei we observed that the remaining nucleoporins were not evenly distributed within the NE. To characterize this, we collected stacks of confocal sections of the nuclei labelled with mAb414 or with anti-Nup214/CAN antibodies and reconstructed the images in three dimensions. Projections of these reconstructions demonstrated that the nucleoporins were not uniformly distributed within the NE of depleted nuclei. An example is shown in Figure 3A. This phenomenon is reminiscent of, but apparently less severe than, the clustering phenomenon observed in yeast strains carrying mutations in one of a number of specific nucleoporin genes (Fabre and Hurt, 1997). Figure 3.Clustering of Nup153-deficient NPCs. Nuclei were assembled in vitro from mock-depleted or Nup153-depleted Xenopus egg cytosol and NPC distribution analysed using confocal immunofluorescence. (A) 3D reconstruction of confocal sections through a wild-type (Mock depletion) and Nup153-deficient (Nup153 depletion) nucleus stained with anti-Nup214/CAN primary and Alexa-488 conjugated secondary antibodies. Left hand images are rotated 180° as compared with right hand images. (B) Quantitation of NPC clustering. Nuclei were assembled from mock or Nup153-depleted (ΔNup153) Xenopus egg extracts in the presence (+h153) or absence of recombinant hNup153, and immunostained with mAb414 and Alexa-488 conjugated secondary antibody. Mid-plane confocal images were recorded and NEs were analysed for discontinuities. Both the percentage of NE length without nucleoporin staining (left panel) and the number of nucleoporin gaps in the nucleoporin staining per nucleus (right panel) are represented. Bars represent standard deviations. (C) Representative immunofluorescence images of mid-plane confocal sections of synthetic nuclei analysed in (B). Nucleoporin staining is in red, chromatin staining (DAPI) in blue. Download figure Download PowerPoint In optical cross-sections, the nucleoporin staining along the rim of the Nup153-deficient nuclei appeared as a broken line (Figure 3C, bottom left panel). In order to analyse this quantitatively, several optical mid-sections of nuclei from each reaction were collected and two parameters were measured: the percentage of each NE that did not show a detectable mAb414 signal, and the number of apparent gaps in NPC distribution along the nuclear rim. Representative pictures of nuclei obtained in Nup153-depleted or mock-depleted reconstitution reactions, with or without the addition of recombinant Nup153, are shown in Figure 3C. As shown in Figure 3B, depletion of Nup153 resulted in almost 40% of the NE being free of detectable NPCs. The addition of recombinant hNup153 to the nuclear reconstitution reactions reversed this effect to 9% NPC-free NE, demonstrating that the clustering was specifically caused by depletion of Nup153 (Figure 3B and C, bottom right). In a mock-depleted nuclear reconstitution reaction only a small fraction of nuclei contained gaps in their nuclear rim staining (average = 0.3, n = 21). However, an average of 4.1 gaps per nuclear rim were present in Nup153-depleted nuclei (n = 18) (Figure 3B, right). Again, this effect was almost completely reversed by adding recombinant hNup153 to the reaction (average = 0.6, n = 18) (Figure 3B). The addition of recombinant hNup153 to mock-depleted reconstitution reactions had no significant effect (Figure 3B and C). Depletion of Nup153 results in loss of several Nups from the nuclear basket In order to gain more insight into the non-uniform NPC distribution in Nup153-deficient NPCs, we wished to test the effect of depletion on the incorporation of other components of the NPC basket as well as associated proteins. To this end, monospecific antibodies were used to assay the distribution of Nup98, Nup93 and Tpr by confocal microscopy. Images were recorded using the same settings for all reactions within one experiment. Nup93 and Nup98 have been localized to the nuclear basket structure of the NPC (Radu et al., 1995; Grandi et al., 1997). Tpr has been detected at or adjacent to the distal ring of the NPC basket and forms filaments emanating from the NPC and reaching into the nucleus (Cordes et al., 1993, 1997). Nup93, Nup98 and Tpr were all almost undetectable by immunofluorescence of Nup153-depleted nuclei. None of these proteins was co-depleted with Nup153 however (data not shown), and their loss from the nucleus was completely reversed by the addition of recombinant Nup153 to the assembly reactions (Figure 4A–C). The removal and restoration of Nup93, Nup98 and Tpr by depletion and readdition of Nup153 indicates that Nup153 is required for either the formation or the structural integrity of the nuclear face of the NPC, and suggests that a large part of the nuclear basket may be missing in Nup153-depleted NPCs. In a study of the effects of lamins on Nup153 assembly into the NPC, Smythe et al. (2000) reported that Nup93 was detectable in nuclei in which Nup153 incorporation was not detected. We do not understand this apparent discrepancy. The loss of Nup93 after depletion of Nup153 was reproducible in our hands, and we therefore assume that differences in the experimental conditions, the obvious major one being that Nup153 was still present in the assembly reactions of Smythe and coworkers, account for the result obtained. Figure 4.Nup153-deficient NPCs lack several other components. Nuclei were assembled in vitro from mock-depleted (Mock) or Nup153-depleted (ΔNup153) Xenopus egg cytosol in the presence (+h153) or absence of recombinant hNup153, as indicated. Assembled nuclei were fixed and immunostained with antibodies recognizing Nup93 (A), Nup98 (B), Tpr (C), with mAb414 (D) or Nup358/RanBP2 (E). Secondary antibodies were conjugated to Alexa-546 (red). Decondensed sperm chromatin is stained with DAPI (blue). Bar, 10 μm. Download figure Download PowerPoint To test whether nucleoporins localizing to the central or cytoplasmic regions of the NPC were also absent from Nup153-depleted NPCs, we performed immunofluorescence with mAb414. Immunofluorescence with this antibody reflects the distribution of the centrally located p62 and to a lesser extent the two cytoplasmic face nucleoporins Nup358/RanBP2 and Nup214/CAN, as well as Nup153 itself (Figure 2A; Davis and Blobel, 1987). The nuclear rim signal obtained was only slightly reduced in the Nup153-depleted nuclei, indicating that the bulk of the recognized proteins remains associated with the NE (Figure 4D, see also 3C). Nup358/RanBP2 and Nup214/CAN were also shown to be present at normal levels in Nup153-depleted NPCs by staining with monospecific antibodies (Figure 4E and data not shown). Other structural features of the synthetic nuclei, for example the nuclear lamina (Figure 2B), remained unchanged in Nup153-depleted extracts. Nup 153-deficient NPCs become mobile within the NE The results presented above demonstrate that the composition of both the nuclear basket of the NPC and that of the associated Tpr filaments is significantly altered by the lack of Nup153, and that these NPCs exhibit an abnormal distribution within the NE. Taken together, the results suggest that Nup153-deficient NPCs might lack the connection that anchors NPCs within the NE (Daigle et al., 2001). We therefore tested the effect of Nup153 on the mobility of NPCs by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP). NPCs were labelled with Oregon Orange–wheatgerm agglutinin (WGA*). WGA has been shown to bind stably to several nucleoporins through residues modified by O-linked N-acetylglucos amine (Finlay et al., 1987). Assembled nuclei were collected on coverslips and free WGA* was removed. A stripe of the nuclear rim fluorescence signal was bleached (Figure 5A). In nuclei assembled in mock-depleted extracts no redistribution of the WGA* fluorescence back into the bleached region was seen within 40 min (Figure 5A, top panels; see also Daigle et al., 2001). This indicated that the NPCs were immobile in the NE during the time course of the experiment and that WGA did not detectably dissociate from, and rebind to, NPCs during this period. In contrast, when nuclei assembled in Nup153-depleted extracts were monitored for the recovery of fluorescence in the bleached area, they recovered a large fraction of their initial intensity (Figure 5A, lower panels). The results of three independent experiments were quantified (Figure 5B). NPC fluorescence returned to ∼50% of its initial level after 30 min in the bleached area, demonstrating that NPCs lacking Nup153 were mobile within the NE. Figure 5.Nup153-deficient NPCs display increased mobility within the NE. (A) Representative fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) series of nuclei assembled in vitro from mock-depleted (M, upper panels) or Nup153-depleted (Δ, lower panels) Xenopus egg extracts, stained with Oregon Orange labelled wheatgerm agglutinin. (B) Quantitation of FRAP in three independent experiments using mock-depleted (open squares) or Nup153-depleted (solid squares) assembled nuclei. Download figure Download PowerPoint Nup153 is required for basic NLS-mediated nuclear protein import but not for M9-mediated import We wished to determine the effect of Nup153 depletion on NPC function during protein import into the nucleus. Two import pathways were compared, using model substrates. The first was a peptide containing the SV40 large T antigen NLS sequence cross-linked in vitro to bovine serum albumin (BSA) (Palacios et al., 1996). This binds to the importin α/β heterodimer, which mediates its translocation through the pore (Görlich and Kutay, 1999). Since BSA alone is already larger than the exclusion limit of the NPC, no diffusion into the nucleus occurs, as can be seen in reactions incubated at 4°C (Palacios et al., 1996). The second substrate was a fusion protein of the nucleoplasmin core and the M9 domain of hnRNP A1 (Englmeier et al., 1999)