Lecture 2: Nuclear import Flashcards
How did membrane enclosed organelles arise from the asgard archeon?
- Internal membranes surround the archael DNA and aerobic bacterium is engulfed
- Endosymbiont sheds encasing plasma membrane and escapes into cytosol
- Internal membranes pinch off to form nucleus and endomembrane system
How do proteins reach their target area?
They are translated in cytosol and cross organelle membranes to reach their place of function
What is the signal hypothesis?
Idea that proteins have signals needed to target proteins to organelles
What is the role of cytosol in protein targeting?
Default destination
When there’s no signal the protein stays in the cytosol (70%)
What are the 4 rules of protein targeting>
- Signal targets the protein to the right place
- Receptors recognise the signal
- Transport machinery lets proteins cross the membrane
- Energy ATP is needed
What are signal sequences?
Polypeptide sequences made of specific amino acids
Might be removed when protein is delivered
What is the nuclear envelope made up of?
Outer nuclear membrane
Inner nuclear membrane
Nuclear lamina
What is the outer nuclear membrane?
Continuous with the ER and has similar composition
What is the inner nuclear membrane?
Has proteins that bind to chromosomes and lamina
What is the nuclear lamina?
Protein network made of lamins
What are nuclear pores?
Gateway to nucleus
Small water soluble molecules can diffuse through
Folded proteins can enter
Larger things use active transport
What are nuclear targeting signals?
Target proteins to the nucleus
Have lots of positive amino acids
Under 12 aa long
Not removed after protein is targeted
How is protein imported into the nucleus?
- Nuclear import receptor binds to protein with nuclear localization signal in cytosol
- Fibrils direct receptor to the pore
- Receptors bind to pore proteins
- Cargo proteins move into nucleus
What is GTP hydrolysis?
Drives nuclear import
What are the two types of small GTPase Ran?
GTP bound in nucleus
GDP bound in cytosol