Abstract
AbstractIntegral membrane proteins of the Lap2-emerin-MAN1 (LEM) family have emerged as important components of the inner nuclear membrane (INM) required for the functional and physical integrity of the nuclear envelope. However, like many INM proteins, there is limited understanding of the biochemical interaction networks that enable LEM protein function. Here, we show that Heh2/Man1 can be affinity purified with major scaffold components of the nuclear pore complex (NPC), specifically the inner ring complex, in evolutionarily distant yeasts. Interactions between Heh2 and nucleoporins is mediated by its C-terminal winged-helix (WH) domain and are distinct from interactions required for INM targeting. Disrupting interactions between Heh2 and the NPC leads to NPC clustering. Interestingly, Heh2’s association with NPCs can also be broken by knocking out Nup133, a component of the outer ring that does not physically interact with Heh2. Thus, Heh2’s association with NPCs depends on the structural integrity of both major NPC scaffold complexes. We propose a model in which Heh2 acts as a sensor of NPC assembly state, which may be important for NPC quality control mechanisms and the segregation of NPCs during cell division.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
2 articles.
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