4.8 Article

Apoptotic histone modification inhibits nuclear transport by regulating RCC1

Journal

NATURE CELL BIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages 36-U65

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/ncb1810

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Funding

  1. Academic Research Fund
  2. Ministry of Education, Singapore [ARC 7/06]
  3. Biomedical Research Council, A*STAR, Singapore [05/1/22/19/388]

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A number of signalling pathways have been identified that regulate apoptosis, but the mechanism that initiates apoptosis remains incompletely understood. We have found that the nuclear RanGTP level is diminished during the early stages of apoptosis, which correlates with immobilization of RCC1 on the chromosomes. Furthermore, the expression of phosphomimetic histone H2B or caspase-activated Mst1 immobilizes RCC1 and causes reduction of nuclear RanGTP levels, which leads to inactivation of the nuclear transport machinery. As a consequence, nuclear localization signal (NLS)-containing proteins, including NF-kappa B-p65, remain bound to importins alpha and beta in the cytoplasm. Knocking down Mst1 allows resumption of nuclear transport and the nuclear entry of NF-kappa B-p65, which have important roles in rescuing cells from apoptosis. Therefore, we propose that RCC1 reads the histone code created by caspase-activated Mst1 to initiate apoptosis by reducing the level of RanGTP in the nucleus.

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