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9 The Nucleus

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9 The Nucleus Student Learning Outcomes: Nucleus distinguishes Eukaryotes from Prokaryotes Explain general structures of Nuclear Envelope, Nuclear Lamina, Nuclear ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: 9 The Nucleus


1
9 The Nucleus
  • Student Learning Outcomes
  • Nucleus distinguishes
  • Eukaryotes from Prokaryotes
  • Explain general structures of Nuclear Envelope,
    Nuclear Lamina, Nuclear Pore Complex
  • Explain movement of proteins and RNA between
    Nucleus and Cytoplasm
  • Selective traffic of proteins, RNAs regulates
    gene expression
  • Describe the Internal Organization of the
    Nucleus
  • Describe the Nucleolus and rRNA Processing

2
Nuclear EnvelopeTraffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • 1. Nuclear envelope
  • Two membranes
  • Underlying nuclear lamina
  • Nuclear pore complexes
  • Outer membrane continuous with ER
  • membrane proteins bind cytoskeleton
  • Inner membrane proteins bind nuclear lamina

Fig. 9.1 EM of nucleus arrows indicate nuclear
pores
3
Nuclear membrane, nuclear pores
Fig. 9.1 Outer membrane is continuous with
ER Note ribosomes on ER
  • Each nuclear membrane is phospholipid bilayer
    permeable only to small nonpolar molecules.
  • Nuclear pore complexes are sole channels for
    small polar molecules, ions, proteins, RNA to
    pass through nuclear envelope.

Fig. 9.2 EM of nucleus arrows indicate nuclear
pores
4
Nuclear Envelope,Traffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • Nuclear lamina is fibrous mesh (structural
    support)
  • Fibrous proteins (lamins),
  • and other proteins.
  • Mutations in lamin genes
  • cause inherited diseases

Fig. 9.3 EM of nuclear lamina
Hutchinson-Gilford Progeria causes premature
aging Mutations in LMNA gene affect Lamin A
protein
5
Nuclear Envelope, Traffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • Mammals have 3 lamin genes, (A, B, and C), which
    code for at least 7 proteins.
  • Two lamins form dimer, a-helical regions of 2
    polypeptide chains wind around each other -gt
    coiled coil.
  • Lamin dimers associate to form nuclear lamina.

Fig. 9.4
6
Nuclear Envelope, Traffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • Nuclear pore complexes
  • large 120 nm
  • Complex vertebrates, 30 different proteins
    (nucleoporins)
  • Circular structures on faces of membrane 8-fold
    symmetry.
  • Lamina loose mesh in nucleus
  • Lamins bind
  • Protein emerin,
  • lamin B receptor (LBR)
  • (inner membrane)
  • Chromatin.
  • .

Figs. 9.5, 9,7
7
Nuclear Pore,Traffic between Nucleus and Cytoplasm
  • Nuclear pore complex - 8 spokes connected to
    rings at nuclear and cytoplasmic surfaces.
  • Spoke-ring assembly
  • surrounds central channel
  • Protein filaments extend
  • from rings
  • Basketlike structure
  • on nuclear side.
  • Cytoplasmic filaments
  • on cytoplasmic side

Fig. 9.8 nuclear Pore complex
8
Nuclear Pore Complex, Traffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • Nuclear Pore Complex controls traffic between
  • nucleus and cytoplasm
  • critical for physiology
  • Passive transport
  • small molecules pass freely
  • through channels
  • Selective transport
  • energy-dependent
  • for macromolecules
  • (proteins and RNAs)

Fig. 9.6 nuclear pore complex controls transport
9
Nuclear Envelope, Traffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • Nuclear localization signals (NLS)
  • Required for proteins to enter nucleus- specific
    aa seq
  • Recognized by nuclear transport receptors
  • transport of proteins through nuclear pore
  • first identified on SV40 T antigen
  • (viral replication protein)
  • mutants helped figure
  • Some NLS are one aa seq
  • Others bipartitate seq

A, kinase with SV40 NLS B, mutated NLS
10
Nuclear Envelope, Traffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • Import of proteins to nucleus
  • NLS recognized by nuclear transport receptors
    importins
  • Activity of nuclear transport receptors regulated
    by Ran, a GTP-binding protein
  • Importins bind cargo at NLS sequence
  • Move through pore
  • Ran-GTP unloads, takes importin out.
  • High concentration of Ran/GTP in nucleus
  • enzyme localization
  • GAP does GTP hydrolysis in cytoplasm
  • GEF does GDP/ GTP exchange
  • in nucleus (Fig. 9.20)

Fig. 9.11 import of proteins
11
Nuclear Envelope, Traffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • Nuclear export signals (NES)
  • Required for proteins targeted for export
  • Signals recognized by exportins
  • (receptors in nucleus) direct transport to
    cytoplasm
  • Less well characterized than NLS
  • Ran also required for nuclear export
  • Ran/GTP promotes binding of exportins
  • and their cargo proteins,
  • Ran/GTP dissociates complexes between importins
    and cargos (see Fig. 9.10)

Fig. 9.12 export of proteins
12
Many importins and exportins are family of
nuclear transport receptors - karyopherins.
13
Nuclear Envelope, Traffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • Regulation of Protein transport is another point
    at which nuclear protein activity can be
    controlled
  • Regulation of import, export of transcription
    factors
  • Inhibitors block import (IkB and NF-kB)
  • phosphorylation can block import (de-PO4 releases)

Fig. 9.13 regulated import
14
Nuclear Envelope, Traffic between Nucleus and
Cytoplasm
  • Most RNAs are exported from nucleus to cytoplasm
    to function in protein synthesis
  • Active, energy-dependent process
  • requires transport receptors
  • Transported as ribonucleoprotein
  • complexes (RNPs).
  • rRNAs associate with ribosomal
  • proteins, specific RNA processing
  • proteins in nucleolus (Fig. 9.31).
  • mRNAs associate with 20 proteins
  • during processing, transport

Fig. 9.14 EM of RNP transport insect salivary
gland RNA unfolds
15
Fig 9.15 Transport of snRNAs between nucleus and
cytoplasm
  • Many small RNAs (snRNAs, snoRNAs) function in
    nucleus.
  • snRNAs are transported to cytoplasm by exportin
    (Crm1)
  • associate with proteins to form snRNPs and return
    to nucleus snRNPs function in splicing

Fig. 9.15 RNA
16
Internal Organization of the Nucleus
  • 2. Internal structure of nucleus organized,
    localized
  • In animal cells, lamins where chromatin
    attachmes, organize other proteins into
    functional nuclear bodies
  • Heterochromatin highly condensed,
  • transcriptionally inactive
  • Euchromatin decondensed, all over
  • Chromosomes organized in territories
  • Actively transcribed genes at periphery

Fig. 9.16 arrow nucleolus arrowheads
heterochromatin Fig. 9.19 mammalian nucleus DNA
probes to chrom 4
17
Internal Organization of the Nucleus
  • Nuclear processes appear localized (sequestered)
    to distinct subnuclear regions
  • DNA replication
  • Mammalian cells clustered sites labeling newly
    synthesized DNA with bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU in
    place of T)
  • Immunofluorescence (Ab to BrdU)
  • newly replicated DNA in discrete clusters

Fig. 21 A early replication B, late replication
18
Internal Organization of the Nucleus
  • Nuclear processes appear localized (sequestered)
    to distinct subnuclear regions
  • nuclear speckles mRNA splicing machinery
  • Detect with immunofluorescent staining -
    antibodies against snRNPs and splicing factors.
  • PML bodies have transcription factors,
    chromatin-modifying proteins identified from
    protein in promyelocytic leukemia

Fig. 9.22 Speckles Fig. 9.23 PML bodies
19
The Nucleolus and rRNA Processing
  • 3. Nucleolus Site of rRNA transcription,
    processing, some aspects of ribosome assembly.
  • Actively growing mammalian cells have 5 to 10 x
    106 ribosomes, must be synthesized each time cell
    divides.
  • Nucleolus is not surrounded by a membrane
  • Multiple copies of rRNA genes (200 human)
  • In oocytes, rRNA genes amplified,
  • synthesis for early development.
  • rRNA genes amplified 2000-fold in
  • Xenopus oocytes, thousands of nucleoli,
  • ?1012 ribosomes per oocyte

Fig. 9.26 Xenopus oocyte rRNA genes
20
The Nucleolus and rRNA Processing
Fig. 9.28
  • Nucleolar
  • organizing regions
  • After each cell division, nucleoli reform,
    associated to genes for 5.8S, 18S, and 28S rRNA
    genes
  • Each nucleolar organizing region has tandemly
    repeated rRNA genes separated by spacer DNA
  • 5.8S, 18S, and 28S rRNAs are transcribed as
    single unit in nucleolus by RNA pol I ? 45S
    ribosomal precursor RNA

Fig. 9.25
21
Fig 9.29 Processing of pre-rRNA
  • Primary transcript of rRNA genes is large 45S
    pre-rRNA
  • pre-rRNA processed via series of cleavages, and
    some base modifications, including methylations
  • snoRNPs (snoRNAs with proteins) assemble on
    pre-rRNA as processing complexes (like
    spliceosomes on pre-mRNA)

Fig. 9.29 ETS, external transcribed ITS, internal
transcribed
22
Fig 9.31 Ribosome assembly
  • Formation of ribosomes requires assembly of
    pre-rRNA with ribosomal proteins and 5S rRNA,
    then export of subunits
  • pol II made the mRNA for ribosomal proteins.

Fig. 9.31
23
  • Review questions
  • 1. Eukaryote nuclear membranes separate
    transcription from translation. What regulatory
    mechanisms unique to eukaryotes achieve this
    regulation?
  • 3. If you inject a frog egg with two globular
    proteins, one 15 kd and the other 100 kd, both of
    which lack NLS, will either protein enter the
    nucleus?
  • 4. What determines the directionality of nuclear
    import?
  • 5. Describe how the activity of a transcription
    factor can be regulated by nuclear import.
  • Consider the effect of mutations at gene level
    that inactivate NLS, NES, prevent phosphorylation
    of key sites, or prevent binding inhibitors on
    function
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