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Article
Nature 458, 1136-1141 (30 April 2009) | doi:10.1038/nature07975; Received 15 December 2008; Accepted 6 March 2009; Published online 1 April 2009
There is a Corrigendum (24 September 2009) associated with this document.
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Postdoctoral Fellow - Computational Genomics - Team 78 – Ref: 80464
- Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute
- Hinxton, Cambridgeshire CB10 1, UK
Postdoctoral Research in Functional Genomics
- Harvard School of Public Health, computer science, biology, bioinformatics,
- Boston, MA
Structural basis for leucine-rich nuclear export signal recognition by CRM1
Xiuhua Dong1, Anindita Biswas1, Katherine E. Süel1, Laurie K. Jackson1, Rita Martinez1, Hongmei Gu1 & Yuh Min Chook1
- Department of Pharmacology, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas, 6001 Forest Park, Dallas, Texas 75390-9041, USA
Correspondence to: Yuh Min Chook1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to Y.M.C. (Email: yuhmin.chook@utsouthwestern.edu).
Abstract
CRM1 (also known as XPO1 and exportin 1) mediates nuclear export of hundreds of proteins through the recognition of the leucine-rich nuclear export signal (LR-NES). Here we present the 2.9 Å structure of CRM1 bound to snurportin 1 (SNUPN). Snurportin 1 binds CRM1 in a bipartite manner by means of an amino-terminal LR-NES and its nucleotide-binding domain. The LR-NES is a combined
-helical-extended structure that occupies a hydrophobic groove between two CRM1 outer helices. The LR-NES interface explains the consensus hydrophobic pattern, preference for intervening electronegative residues and inhibition by leptomycin B. The second nuclear export signal epitope is a basic surface on the snurportin 1 nucleotide-binding domain, which binds an acidic patch on CRM1 adjacent to the LR-NES site. Multipartite recognition of individually weak nuclear export signal epitopes may be common to CRM1 substrates, enhancing CRM1 binding beyond the generally low affinity LR-NES. Similar energetic construction is also used in multipartite nuclear localization signals to provide broad substrate specificity and rapid evolution in nuclear transport.
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NEWS AND VIEWS
Nuclear transport comes full circleNature Structural & Molecular Biology News and Views (01 May 2009)
RESEARCH
Structural basis for assembly and disassembly of the CRM1 nuclear export complexNature Structural & Molecular Biology Brief Communication (01 May 2009)
Rat8p/Dbp5p is a shuttling transport factor that interacts with Rat7p/Nup159p and Gle1p and suppresses the mRNA export defect of xpo1-1 cellsThe EMBO Journal Article (15 Oct 1999)
Leptomycin B-sensitive nuclear export of MAPKAP kinase 2 is regulated by phosphorylationThe EMBO Journal Article (15 Jun 1998)
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