| Literature DB >> 24637836 |
Haruhiko Asakawa1, Hui-Ju Yang1, Takaharu G Yamamoto2, Chizuru Ohtsuki1, Yuji Chikashige3, Kumiko Sakata-Sogawa4, Makio Tokunaga4, Masaaki Iwamoto2, Yasushi Hiraoka5, Tokuko Haraguchi5.
Abstract
The nuclear pore complex (NPC) is an enormous proteinaceous complex composed of multiple copies of about 30 different proteins called nucleoporins. In this study, we analyzed the composition of the NPC in the model organism Schizosaccharomyces pombe using strains in which individual nucleoporins were tagged with GFP. We identified 31 proteins as nucleoporins by their localization to the nuclear periphery. Gene disruption analysis in previous studies coupled with gene disruption analysis in the present study indicates that 15 of these nucleoporins are essential for vegetative cell growth and the other 16 nucleoporins are non-essential. Among the 16 non-essential nucleoporins, 11 are required for normal progression through meiosis and their disruption caused abnormal spore formation or poor spore viability. Based on fluorescence measurements of GFP-fused nucleoporins, we estimated the composition of the NPC in S. pombe and found that the organization of the S. pombe NPC is largely similar to that of other organisms; a single NPC was estimated as being 45.8-47.8 MDa in size. We also used fluorescence measurements of single NPCs and quantitative western blotting to analyze the composition of the Nup107-Nup160 subcomplex, which plays an indispensable role in NPC organization and function. Our analysis revealed low amounts of Nup107 and Nup131 and high amounts of Nup132 in the Nup107-Nup160 subcomplex, suggesting that the composition of this complex in S. pombe may differ from that in S. cerevisiae and humans. Comparative analysis of NPCs in various organisms will lead to a comprehensive understanding of the functional architecture of the NPC.Entities:
Keywords: Nup107-160 complex; fission yeast; fluorescence measurement; nuclear envelope; nuclear pore complex; nucleoporins
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24637836 PMCID: PMC4049921 DOI: 10.4161/nucl.28487
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nucleus ISSN: 1949-1034 Impact factor: 4.197

Figure 1.S. pombe nucleoporins fused to GFP. (A) Subcellular localization of GFP-tagged nucleoporins. The different images were obtained with the same acquisition times and processed in parallel. Deconvolved images are shown. The top left two panels show fluorescence (left) and bright field (right) images of an spCut11-GFP expressing cell. Nucleoporins were classified into seven groups according to localization in the NPC inferred from localization of the budding yeast orthologs. The scale bar represents 10 μm. (B-D) Localization of GFP-spSec13 (B), spAmo1-GFP (C), and spTts1-GFP (D) in wild type and cells lacking spNup132 (nup132Δ); in (B), GFP was fused with N-terminus (left) and C-terminus (right) of spSec13. spCut11-mCherry was simultaneously observed as a known nucleoporin marker. Yellow arrows indicate NPC-clustering regions in nup132Δ cells (lower panels). The scale bars represent 10 μm.

Figure 2. Quantification of GFP-tagged nucleoporins. (A) Fluorescence intensities of GFP-tagged nucleoporins. Fluorescence intensities of about 50 cells from each strain cultured at 26 °C were measured. Average values after background subtraction are shown in the bar graph. Error bars represent standard deviations. Components of the Nup107-Nup160 subcomplex are shown in magenta. (B) Quantitative western blot analysis of Nup107-Nup160 subcomplex nucleoporins. GFP-fused nucleoporins were fractioned by SDS-PAGE and detected by anti-GFP antibody (left). The membranes were stripped and reprobed to detect endogenous spNup189n as an internal control (right). The numbers above the images indicate cell numbers used to prepare the whole cell extract for each lane. (C) The relative amounts of Nup107-Nup160 subcomplex nucleoporins based on quantitative western blot analysis. Protein band intensities for 1 × 106 cells in (B) were measured for quantification. See Materials and Methods for detail.
Table 1. Nucleoporins in S. pombe
| Name | ORF name | predicted MW | fluorescence intensity (unit) | Relative amount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| spCut11 | SPAC1786.03 | 69.3 | 100.32 | 2.89 |
| spPom34 /Mug31 | SPAC1002.02 | 25.8 | 94.83 | 2.73 |
| spPom152 | SPBC29A10.07 | 139.5 | 39.31 | 1.13 |
| spTts1 | SPBC1539.04 | 31.5 | ND | ND |
| spEly5 | SPBC29A10.06c | 35.1 | 73.02 | 2.10 |
| spNup37 | SPAC4F10.18 | 42.7 | 86.60 | 2.49 |
| spNup85 | SPBC17G9.04c | 78 | 69.54 | 2.00 |
| spNup107 | SPBC428.01c | 93.2 | 29.75 | 0.86 |
| spNup120 | SPBC3B9.16c | 129.7 | 77.40 | 2.23 |
| spNup131 | SPBP35G2.06c | 131.4 | 13.32 | 0.38 |
| spNup132 | SPAC1805.04 | 132 | 235.30 | 6.77 |
| spNup189c | SPAC1486.05 | 94.6 | 80.09 | 2.30 |
| spSeh1 | SPAC15F9.02 | 38.5 | 49.13 | 1.41 |
| spNup97 /Mug87 | SPCC1620.11 | 97.5 | 122.35 | 3.52 |
| spNpp106 | SPCC1739.14 | 105.7 | 52.71 | 1.52 |
| spNup184 | SPAP27G11.10c | 176.9 | 37.90 | 1.09 |
| spNup186 | SPCC290.03c | 186.4 | 110.10 | 3.17 |
| spNup155 | SPAC890.06 | 147.6 | 206.04 | 5.93 |
| spNup40 | SPAC19E9.01c | 40.2 | 195.44 | 5.62 |
| spNsp1 | SPAC26A3.15c | 60.7 | 314.31 | 9.04 |
| spNup44 | SPBC19G7.15 | 44.4 | 115.94 | 3.33 |
| spNup45 | SPAC22G7.09c | 44.9 | 60.53 | 1.77 |
| spNup82 | SPBC13A2.02 | 90.6 | 99.41 | 2.86 |
| spNup146 | SPAC23D3.06c | 145.7 | 106.41 | 3.06 |
| spNup60 | SPCC285.13c | 80.2 | 207.13 | 5.96 |
| spNup61 | SPCC18B5.07c | 59.1 | 102.42 | 2.95 |
| spNup124 | SPAC30D11.04c | 123.9 | 35.09 | 1.01 |
| spNup211 | SPCC162.08c | 211.4 | 82.91 | 2.38 |
| spNup189n | SPAC1486.05 | 95 | 222.33 | 6.39 |
| spRae1 | SPBC16A3.05c | 38.6 | 444.89 | 12.80 |
| spAmo1 | SPBC15D4.10c | 51.7 | 43.34 | 1.25 |
Table 2. Essentiality of S. pombe nucleoporins
| Name | ORF name | Individual analyses (references) | Comprehensive deletion analysis (Kim et al.) | This study | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SPAC1786.03 | e | (West et al.) | e | ||
| spPom34 /Mug31 | SPAC1002.02 | n | n | ||
| spPom152 | SPBC29A10.07 | n | n | ||
| spTts1 | SPBC1539.04 | n | (Zhang et al.) | n | |
| spEly5 | SPBC29A10.06c | n | (Bilokapic and Schwartz) | n | n |
| spNup37 | SPAC4F10.18 | n | (Bilokapic and Schwartz) | n | n |
| SPBC17G9.04c | e | (Baï et al.; Chen et al.) | e | ||
| SPBC428.01c | e | (Baï et al.; Chen et al.) | e | ||
| spNup120 | SPBC3B9.16c | n | (Baï et al.) | n | |
| spNup131 | SPBP35G2.06c | n | (Baï et al.) | n | |
| spNup132 | SPAC1805.04 | n | (Baï et al.; Chen et al.) | n | |
| SPAC1486.05 | e | ||||
| spSeh1 | SPAC15F9.02 | n | (Baï et al.; Chen et al.) | n | |
| SPCC1620.11 | e | (Cho et al.) | e | ||
| spNpp106 | SPCC1739.14 | n | (Yoon et al.) | n | |
| spNup184 | SPAP27G11.10c | n | (Whalen et al.) | n | |
| SPCC290.03c | e | (Chen et al.) | e | ||
| SPAC890.06 | n | e | |||
| spNup40 | SPAC19E9.01c | n | (Chen et al.) | n | |
| SPAC26A3.15c | e | (Chen et al.) | e | ||
| SPBC19G7.15 | e | (Chen et al.) | e | ||
| SPAC22G7.09c | e | (Chen et al.) | e | ||
| SPBC13A2.02 | n | e | |||
| SPAC23D3.06c | e | (Chen et al.) | e | ||
| spNup60 | SPCC285.13c | n | n | ||
| spNup61 | SPCC18B5.07c | n | (Chen et al.) | n | |
| spNup124 | SPAC30D11.04c | n | (Balasundaram et al.) | n | |
| SPCC162.08c | e | (Chen et al.) | e | ||
| SPAC1486.05 | e | ||||
| SPBC16A3.05c | e | (Brown et al.) | e | ||
| spAmo1 | SPBC15D4.10c | n | (Pardo and Nurse) | n | |
Essential nucleoporins are shown in bold according to individual analyses and this study. “e” and “n” represent “essential” and “non-essential,” respectively.

Figure 3. Fluorescence intensities of GFP-tagged nucleoporins measured by HILO microscopy. (A) HILO microscopy images of cells expressing spNup131-GFP, spNup107-GFP, spNup85-GFP, and spNup132-GFP. The nuclear region of a single cell is shown. The scale bar indicates 1 μm. (B) Fluorescence intensity of nucleoporins in single NPCs. Average and standard deviation are shown.
Table 3. Correspondence table of nucleoporins
| hsNdc1 | At1g73240 | |||
| - | - | |||
| - | - | |||
| AN6689.2 | hsTMEM33 | At3g02420 | ||
| - | - | - | hsGp/Nup210 | atGp210 |
| - | - | - | hsPom121 | - |
| - | hsELYS | atElys/HOS1 | ||
| - | hsNup37 | - | ||
| hsNup75/85 | atNup75 | |||
| hsNup107 | atNup107 | |||
| hsNup160 | atNup160 | |||
| hsNup133 | atNup133 | |||
| spNup132 | ||||
| hsNup96 | atNup96/PRECOZ | |||
| hsSeh1/Sec13L | atSeh1 | |||
| ―* | hsSec13R | atSec13 | ||
| hsNup93 | atNup93a | |||
| atNup93b | ||||
| hsNup188 | atNup188 | |||
| hsNup205 | atNup205 | |||
| hsNup155 | atNup155 | |||
| - | hsNup35 (MP-44) | atNup35 | ||
| hsNup62 | atNup62 | |||
| hsNup54 | atNup54 | |||
| hsNup58 | atNup58 | |||
| - | - | - | hsNup45 | - |
| - | - | - | hsNup358 | - |
| hsNup88 | atNup88 | |||
| hsNup214 | atNup214 | |||
| - | - | - | ||
| hsNup50 | atNup50a | |||
| atNup50b | ||||
| hsNup153 | atNup136/Nup1 | |||
| hsTpr | atTpr/NUA | |||
| hsNup98 | atNup98a | |||
| atNup98b | ||||
| hsRAE1 | atRAE1 | |||
| hsNlp1/hCG1/NUPL2 | - | |||
| - | - | - | hsALADIN | atALADIN |
| - | - | - | hsNup43 | atNup43 |
Essential and non-essential nucleoporins reported in S. pombe, S. cerevisiae, and A. nidulans are indicated in bold and italics, respectively. *Sec13 does not show nuclear periphery localization in S. pombe, thus it is not included in the “S. pombe” column and is represented as (-). Essentiality of AN6689.2 of A. nidulans is not clarified to date.
Table 4. Function of non-essential nucleoporins for various growth conditions
| genotypes | 26 °C | 30 °C | 36 °C | 20 μg/ml TBZ | 10 mM HU |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| wild type | ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | +++ |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | +++ | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++S | +++ | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | ++ | + | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | +++ | |
| +++S | ++SS | - | - | - | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | +++ | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | +++ | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +SS | +S | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +SSS | +S | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | +++ | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | +++ | |
| ++++ | ++++S | +++SS | + | +++ | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | ++SS | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | +++ | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | ++SS | ++SS | |
| ++++S | +++S | +++S | +++ | +++ | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | - | ++S | |
| ++++ | ++++ | ++++ | +++ | - |
Each cell strain was cultured to midlog phase in liquid YES. 5-fold serial dilutions of each transformant were spotted onto YES plates with or without HU or TBZ. Viable colony number is indicated by -, +, ++, +++, and ++++: “-” indicates no colony formation. Colony size (growth rate) is indicated by S, for small; SS, for smaller; SSS, for smallest colonies. Δmph1 and Δcds1strains were used as positive controls sensitive to TBZ and HU, respectively. For ∆nup120 strains, TBZ sensitivity and HU sensitivity were assayed at 26 °C.

Figure 4. Effect of gene disruption of non-essential nucleoporins on spore formation. (A) Spore numbers in wild type and nucleoporin mutants. Cells were cultured on sporulation medium for two days, and zygotic cells containing spores were differentially scored. “Yes” and “No” indicate cell strains with a deficiency and no deficiency in spore formation, respectively. (B) The numbers indicate the spore viability of wild type and nucleoporin mutants. Cells forming spores were treated with β-glucuronidase to digest vegetative cells, and the resistant spores were counted and spread on growth media. After colony formation, colony numbers were counted and spore viability was calculated. The value was normalized with that of the wild type, which was given a value of 100. “Yes” and “No” indicate cell strains with a deficiency and no deficiency in spore viability, respectively.