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Letter
Nature 440, 697-701 (30 March 2006) | doi:10.1038/nature04589; Received 18 November 2005; Accepted 18 January 2006
Analysis of a RanGTP-regulated gradient in mitotic somatic cells
Petr Kaláb1, Arnd Pralle1, Ehud Y. Isacoff1, Rebecca Heald1 & Karsten Weis1
- Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of California, Berkeley, California 94720-3200, USA
Correspondence to: Rebecca Heald1Karsten Weis1 Correspondence and requests for materials should be addressed to R.H. (Email: heald@socrates.berkeley.edu) or K.W. (Email: kweis@berkeley.edu).
Abstract
The RanGTPase cycle provides directionality to nucleocytoplasmic transport, regulating interactions between cargoes and nuclear transport receptors of the importin-
family1, 2. The Ran–importin-
system also functions in mitotic spindle assembly and nuclear pore and nuclear envelope formation1, 3, 4. The common principle underlying these diverse functions throughout the cell cycle is thought to be anisotropy of the distribution of RanGTP (the RanGTP gradient), driven by the chromatin-associated guanine nucleotide exchange factor RCC1 (refs 1, 4, 5). However, the existence and function of a RanGTP gradient during mitosis in cells is unclear. Here we examine the Ran–importin-
system in cells by conventional and fluorescence lifetime microscopy using a biosensor, termed Rango, that increases its fluorescence resonance energy transfer signal when released from importin-
by RanGTP. Rango is predominantly free in mitotic cells, but is further liberated around mitotic chromatin. In vitro experiments and modelling show that this localized increase of free cargoes corresponds to changes in RanGTP concentration sufficient to stabilize microtubules in extracts. In cells, the Ran–importin-
–cargo gradient kinetically promotes spindle formation but is largely dispensable once the spindle has been established. Consistent with previous reports6, 7, 8, we observe that the Ran system also affects spindle pole formation and chromosome congression in vivo. Our results demonstrate that conserved Ran-regulated pathways are involved in multiple, parallel processes required for spindle function, but that their relative contribution differs in chromatin- versus centrosome/kinetochore-driven spindle assembly systems.
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