4.5 Article

Homeostasis of soluble proteins and the proteasome post nuclear envelope reformation in mitosis

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 132, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.225524

Keywords

Mitosis; Nuclear import; Proteasome; Nuclear envelope; IPO5; Chromatin

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Funding

  1. Nederlandse Organisatie voor Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek (NOW) TOP grant
  2. European Research Council (ERC)

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Upon nuclear envelope (NE) fragmentation in the prometaphase, the nuclear and cytosolic proteomes mix and must be redefined to reinstate homeostasis. Here, by using a molecular GFP ladder, we show that in early mitosis, condensed chromatin excludes cytosolic proteins. When the NE reforms tightly around condensed chromatin in late mitosis, large GFP multimers are automatically excluded from the nucleus. This can be circumvented by limiting DNA condensation with Q15, a condensin II inhibitor. Soluble small and other nuclear localization sequence (NLS)-targeted proteins then swiftly enter the expanding nuclear space. We then examined proteasomes, which are located in the cytoplasm and nucleus. A significant fraction of 20S proteasomes is imported by the importin IPO5 within 20 min of reformation of the nucleus, after which import comes to an abrupt halt. This suggests that maintaining the nuclear-cytosol distribution after mitosis requires chromatin condensation to exclude cytosolic material from the nuclear space, and specialized machineries for nuclear import of large protein complexes, such as the proteasome.

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