4.8 Article

Transport receptor occupancy in nuclear pore complex mimics

Journal

NANO RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages 9689-9703

Publisher

TSINGHUA UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s12274-022-4647-1

Keywords

nuclear pore complex; intrinsically disordered proteins; nuclear transport receptors; karyopherins; nanopores; biomimetics; molecular dynamics; coarse-grained modeling

Funding

  1. NWO-I programme Projectruimte [16PR3242-1]
  2. ERC [883684]
  3. NanoFront programme
  4. BaSyC programme

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Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) regulate molecular transport in eukaryotic cells, and a selective barrier is formed by intrinsically disordered Phe-Gly nucleoporins (FG-Nups). By combining experiments and mathematical modeling, researchers found that Kap95 exhibits two populations when interacting with Nsp1: one population is transported across the pore rapidly, while the other population becomes stably assembled within the FG mesh of the pore.
Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) regulate all molecular transport between the nucleus and the cytoplasm in eukaryotic cells. Intrinsically disordered Phe-Gly nucleoporins (FG-Nups) line the central conduit of NPCs to impart a selective barrier where large proteins are excluded unless bound to a transport receptor (karyopherin; Kap). Here, we assess Kap-centric NPC models, which postulate that Kaps participate in establishing the selective barrier. We combine biomimetic nanopores, formed by tethering Nsp1 to the inner wall of a solid-state nanopore, with coarse-grained modeling to show that yeast Kap95 exhibits two populations in Nsp1-coated pores: one population that is transported across the pore in milliseconds, and a second population that is stably assembled within the FG mesh of the pore. Ionic current measurements show a conductance decrease for increasing Kap concentrations and noise data indicate an increase in rigidity of the FG-mesh. Modeling reveals an accumulation of Kap95 near the pore wall, yielding a conductance decrease. We find that Kaps only mildly affect the conformation of the Nsp1 mesh and that, even at high concentrations, Kaps only bind at most 8% of the FG-motifs in the nanopore, indicating that Kap95 occupancy is limited by steric constraints rather than by depletion of available FG-motifs. Our data provide an alternative explanation of the origin of bimodal NPC binding of Kaps, where a stable population of Kaps binds avidly to the NPC periphery, while fast transport proceeds via a central FG-rich channel through lower affinity interactions between Kaps and the cohesive domains of Nsp1.

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