| Literature DB >> 34830069 |
Joni Vanneste1,2, Ludo Van Den Bosch1,2.
Abstract
There is ample evidence that nucleocytoplasmic-transport deficits could play an important role in the pathology of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). However, the currently available data are often circumstantial and do not fully clarify the exact causal and temporal role of nucleocytoplasmic transport deficits in ALS patients. Gaining this knowledge will be of great significance in order to be able to target therapeutically nucleocytoplasmic transport and/or the proteins involved in this process. The availability of good model systems to study the nucleocytoplasmic transport process in detail will be especially crucial in investigating the effect of different mutations, as well as of other forms of stress. In this review, we discuss the evidence for the involvement of nucleocytoplasmic transport defects in ALS and the methods used to obtain these data. In addition, we provide an overview of the therapeutic strategies which could potentially counteract these defects.Entities:
Keywords: ALS; motor neuron; neurodegeneration
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34830069 PMCID: PMC8620263 DOI: 10.3390/ijms222212175
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Structural organization of the nuclear pore complex. Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) reside in circular openings in the nuclear envelope where the outer and inner nuclear membrane (ONM and INM, respectively) fuse. An NPC consists of different proteins called nucleoporins (nups), which are grouped in subcomplexes. Transmembrane nucleoporins anchor the NPC in the nuclear membrane. They connect to the core scaffold that exists of an outer ring and an inner ring. Linker nucleoporins anchor phenylalanine-glycine nucleoporins (FG nups) to the core scaffold, such that they line and fill the central tube. There, they phase separate into a dense polymer meshwork, which forms a highly selective permeability barrier. Peripheral structures consist of cytoplasmic filaments and a nuclear basket. Cytoplasmic filaments connect to the cytoskeleton and to the protein synthesis machinery. The nuclear basket connects the NPC to aspects of nuclear metabolism, such as mRNA biogenesis and genome organization. ndc1: nuclear division cycle protein 1, pom121: pore membrane protein 121, tpr: translocated promoter region, seh1: Sec13 homologue 1. NPC structure is based on the reviews of Strambio-De-Castillia et al. [61] and Juhlen and Fahrenkrog [62]. Image of the permeability barrier is based on the review of Kim and Taylor [63].
Figure 2Schematic representation of Ran-dependent nucleocytoplasmic transport. Transport across the NPC is achieved by nuclear transport receptors, importins and exportins, and powered by a RanGTP gradient. (A) Nuclear export. (1) In the presence of high RanGTP concentrations, exportin 1 is able to bind cargoes containing a nuclear export signal (NES). (2). As exportin 1 has the unique ability to interact with the FG-repeats of the central channel, the exportin-cargo complex undergoes rapid passage through the pore. (3) In the cytoplasm, hydrolysis of RanGTP to RanGDP will cause the release of the cargo. (4) Exportin 1 is recycled back to the nucleus. (B) Nuclear import. (1) Due to the low affinity for RanGDP, importins bind their cargo in the cytoplasm. Left panel: a protein containing a classical nuclear localization signal (cNLS) is bound by the adaptor importin-α, which subsequently binds importin-β1 via its importin-β-binding domain (IBB). Right panel: proteins containing proline-tyrosine-nuclear localization signal (PY-NLS) are recognized by transportin 1. (2) Importins can transiently open the FG-meshwork of the central channel, allowing the passage of bound cargo. (3) In the nucleus, binding of RanGTP induces conformational changes, which induces cargo release. (4) Importins are exported back to the cytoplasm. (C) RanGTP/GDP cycle. (1) The high concentrations of RanGTP (Ran guanosine triphosphate) in the nucleus is maintained by RanGEF (Ran—guanine exchange factor). (2) RanGTP undergoes a continuous efflux out the nucleus via its binding to NTRs (see A and B). (3) RanGAP (Ran—GTPase activating protein) mediated hydrolysis of RanGTP into RanGDP, resulting in high concentrations of RanGDP (Ran guanosine diphosphate) in the cytoplasm. (4) RanGDP is imported into to the nucleus by NTF2 (nuclear transport factor 2) to restore depleted nuclear levels of RanGTP. Image is based on the review of Cook et al. [65].
Aberrant localization of proteins related to nucleocytoplasmic transport in postmortem tissue. Overview of the available evidence indicating whether or not proteins involved in nucleocytoplasmic transport were abnormally distributed in ALS and/or FTD patients. sALS: sporadic ALS; sFTD: sporadic frontotemporal dementia.
| Proteins | Observations | Models | Refs |
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| Irregular, disrupted at nuclear membrane, increased cytoplasmic localization | sALS, spinal cord | [ |
| Nuclear depletion | sALS, spinal cord | [ | |
| No abnormalities | mutant | [ | |
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| Nuclear depletion and cytoplasmic accumulation | mutant | [ |
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| Nuclear depletion and cytoplasmic accumulation | mutant | [ |
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| Abnormal nuclear precipitations and cytoplasmic upregulation | sALS, spinal cord | [ |
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| Reduced expression (together with nup50, tpr, nup98, ndr1, nup107, nup133) | mutant | [ |
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| Aggregates at nuclear membrane | mutant | [ |
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| Abnormal nuclear localization | mutant | [ |
| Loss of immunoreactivity and large cytoplasmic inclusions | mutant TDP-43 + sALS, motor cortex | [ | |
| Abnormal perinuclear punctate staining | mutant | [ | |
| No abnormalities | mutant | [ | |
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| Tortuous and redundant nuclear contours | mutant | [ |
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| Irregular disrupted nuclear membrane, aggregates, nuclear localization | sALS, spinal cord | [ |
| Tortuous and redundant nuclear contours | mutant | [ | |
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| Abnormal nuclear precipitations and cytoplasmic upregulation | sALS, spinal cord | [ |
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| Abnormal nuclear localization | mutant | [ |
| Abnormal nuclear precipitations and cytoplasmic upregulation | SALS, spinal cord | [ | |
| No abnormalities | mutant TDP-43 + mutant | [ | |
| No abnormalities | mutant | [ | |
Aberrant localization of proteins related to nucleocytoplasmic transport in ALS models. Overview of the data indicating whether or not proteins involved in nucleocytoplasmic transport were affected in in vitro and in vivo models for different forms of ALS. iPSC: induced pluripotent stem cell; CTF: C-terminal fragment.
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| No abnormal staining | Patient-derived mutant | [ |
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| No abnormal staining | Patient-derived mutant | [ |
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| No abnormal staining | Patient-derived mutant | [ |
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| Abnormal staining | Mutant TDP-43 iPSC motor neurons | [ |
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| Interaction with PR50 and GR50 | HEK293T cells expressing PR50 or GR50 | [ |
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| Aggregation together with TDP-43 CTF | BioID approach in Neuro-2a cells expressing TDP-43 CTF | [ |
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| Mislocalization upon TDP-CTF OE | Neuro-2a cells cotransfected with plasmid expressing pom121 and TDP-43 CTF | [ |
| Reduced expression | Patient-derived mutant | [ | |
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| Mislocalization upon TDP-CTF OE | Neuro-2a cells cotransfected with plasmid expressing gp210 and TDP-43 CTF | [ |
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| Abnormal staining | Mutant TDP-43 and mutant | [ |
| No abnormal staining | Sporadic ALS patient fibroblasts | [ | |
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| Irregular nuclear contour | Spinal cord of SOD1G93A mouse model | [ |
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| Disturbed distribution | Neuro-2a cells transfected with TDP-43 CTF | [ |
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| Abnormal staining | Mutant TDP-43 and mutant | [ |
| No abnormal staining | Sporadic patient fibroblasts | [ | |
| Abnormal staining | Mutant TDP-43 iPSC motor neurons | [ | |
| Abnormal staining | Mouse primary cortical neurons expressing TDP-43 CTF/TDP-43Q331K/TDP-43M337V | [ | |
| No abnormal staining | Patient-derived mutant | [ | |
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| Nuclear puncta | S2 | [ |
| Nuclear puncta | Mutant | [ | |
| Abnormal staining | Mouse primary cortical neurons expressing TDP 43 CTF or TDP-43-mtNLS | [ | |
| No abnormal staining | Mouse primary cortical neurons expressing TDP 43Q331K or TDP 43M337V | [ | |
| No abnormal staining | Patient-derived mutant | [ | |
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| Nuclear depletion | Patient derived mutant | [ |
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| Reduced nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio | S2 | [ |
| Reduced nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio | Patient-derived mutant | [ | |
| No change in nuclear/cytopIasmic ratio | Mouse primary cortical neurons expressing TDP-43 CTF or TDP-43-mtNLS | [ | |
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| Cytoplasmic mislocalization | HEK293T cells expressing TDP-43 fragments | [ |
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| Cytoplasmic aggregates | Prp-TDP-43A315T-GFP mouse model | [ |
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| Cytoplasmic accumulation and nuclear depletion | Salivary gland cells of | [ |
| Cytoplasmic accumulation and nuclear depletion | Salivary gland cells of | [ | |
| Cytoplasmic accumulation and nuclear depletion | Salivary gland cells of | [ | |
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| Cytoplasmic accumulation and nuclear depletion | Salivary gland cells of | [ |
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| No abnormal staining | Salivary gland cells of | [ |
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| No abnormal staining | Salivary gland cells of | [ |
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| Increased nuclear localization | Spinal cord motor neurons of SOD1G93A mouse model | [ |
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| Inclusions near nuclear envelope | Salivary gland cells of | [ |
| Increased nuclear localization | Spinal cord motor neurons of SOD1G93A mouse model | [ | |
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| Increased nuclear localization | Spinal cord motor neurons of SOD1G93A mouse model | [ |
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| No abnormal staining | Salivary gland cells of | [ |
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| Abnormal nuclear membrane | Salivary gland cells of | [ |
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| Increased nuclear localization | Spinal cord motor neurons of SOD1G93A mouse model | [ |
| No abnormal staining | Salivary gland cells of | [ | |
| Increased nuclear localization | PrP-TDP43A315T GFP mouse model | [ | |
| Increased localization to nuclear invaginations | Mice expressing (G4C2)149 via intracerebroventricular injections with AAV | [ | |
Modifiers of toxicity. Summary of all the ALS-related models in which the effect of changing nucleocytoplasmic transport proteins on the different phenotypes was determined. S indicates suppressors. A protein is defined as a suppressor when a loss of function (LOF) suppresses the phenotype, a gain of function (GOF) enhances the phenotype or overexpression (OE) enhances the phenotype. E indicates an enhancer. A protein is defined as an enhancer when a LOF enhances the phenotype, a GOF suppresses the phenotype or OE suppresses the phenotype.
| Proteins | E/S | Observations | Models | Refs |
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| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | |
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
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| S | OE enhances phenotype | [ | |
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
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| E | OE suppresses phenotype | Yeast expressing poly-PR50 | [ |
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
| E | OE suppresses NC-transport phenotype | HeLa cells expressing GA149 | [ | |
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| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | |
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
| E | OE suppresses NC-transport phenotype | HeLa cells expressing GA149 | [ | |
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| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | |
| E | OE suppresses phenotype | Yeast expressing poly-PR50 | [ | |
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
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| E | OE suppresses phenotype | Yeast expressing poly-PR50 | [ |
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
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| E | OE suppresses phenotype | Yeast expressing poly-PR50 | [ |
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| E | OE suppresses phenotype | Yeast expressing poly-PR50 | [ |
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype–confirmed by KPT-276 | [ | |
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
| E | LOF enhances phenotype—confirmed by LMB | [ | ||
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
| S | 2.5 nM KPT-350/KPT-335 is mildly protective (no impaired transport) | Rat cortical neurons OE human TDP-43WT | [ | |
| E | 10 nM KPT-350/KPT-335 is toxic | Rat cortical neurons OE human TDP-43WT | [ | |
| KPT-350 induces a partial rescue limited by weight loss | Rat model AAV9 brain injected TDP-43 mRNA | [ | ||
| S | KPT-335 treatment suppresses phenotype | Mouse cortical neurons expressing TDP-43 CTF or TDP-43Q331K | [ | |
| S | 1 µM KPT-335/KPT-276 treatment suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
| E | 150 nM KPT335/KPT-276 treatment enhances phenotype | Mouse cortical neurons expressing TDP-43 CTF or TDP-43Q331K | [ | |
| E | 5 µM KPT-335/KPT-276 | [ | ||
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| E | OE suppresses phenotype | Yeast expressing poly-PR50 | [ |
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| S | OE enhances phenotype | Yeast expressing poly-PR50 | [ |
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
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| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | |
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
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| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | |
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
| S | OE enhances phenotype | [ | ||
| E | OE suppresses NC-transport phenotype | HeLa cells expressing GA149 | [ | |
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| E | OE suppresses NC-transport phenotype | HeLa cells expressing GA149 | [ |
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
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| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | |
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
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| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | |
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | ||
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| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | |
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| E | GOF mutation/OE suppresses phenotype | [ | |
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
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| S | OE enhances phenotype | [ | |
| S | OE enhances phenotype | Yeast expressing poly-PR50 | [ | |
| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | ||
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| E | Dominant negative mutation enhances phenotype | [ | |
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| S | LOF suppresses phenotype | [ | |
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| E | LOF enhances phenotype | [ | |
Functional assays measuring different import pathways. Overview of the different assays used to measure the effects on nucleocytoplasmic transport. n.a.: not applicable.
| Assay | Models | Observations | Suggested Mechanism | Refs |
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| Reduced N/C ratio | RanGap sequestration in nuclear RNA foci | [ | |
| Mutant | Reduced import based on FRAP | |||
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| U2OS treated with PR20 peptides | Reduced import over time | Pores are blocked by poly-PR peptides | [ |
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| Digitonin-treated HeLa cells exposed to PR20 peptides | Reduced import | ||
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| HeLa cells transfected with GA149 expressing plasmid | Increased cytoplasmic levels | Cytoplasmic poly-GA aggregates | [ |
| HeLa cells transfected with GR149 expressing plasmid | No consistent differences observed | n.a. | ||
| HeLa cells transfected with PR175 expressing plasmid | No differences observed | n.a. | ||
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| Primary mouse cortical neurons expressing TDP-43 CTF/mTDP-43 | Reduced N/C ratio | TDP-43 aggregates sequester NC-transport proteins | [ |
| Fibroblasts of mutant | ||||
| HEK293T cells transfected with PR50/GR50 expressing plasmids | Mislocalization of reporter | Stress granules sequester NC-transport proteins | [ | |
| ALS-FUS human spinal neurons and isogenic controls | Decreased nuclear import | Increased interaction of mutant FUS with Nup62 | [ | |
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| Permeabilized HeLa cells incubated with PR20 and GR20 peptides | Decreased nuclear import | Poly-PR and poly-GR bind and disrupt cargo loading of importin-β | [ |
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| Permeabilized HeLa cells incubated with PR20 and GR20 peptides | Increased passive transport | ||
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| HeLa cells incubated with TMR-GR25 peptides | Reduced import | Reduced solubility of importin-α/β via poly-GR binding | [ |
| HeLa cells incubated with TMR-PR25 peptides | No difference observed | n.a. | ||
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| HeLa cells incubated with GR20 or PR20 +/− leptomycin B (LMB) | No differences observed | n.a. | [ |
| HeLa cells transduced with GR100 or PR100 +/− LMB | No differences observed | n.a. | ||
| SH-SY5Y cells transduced with GR100 or PR100 +/− LMB | No differences observed | n.a. | ||
| iPSC-derived MNs transduced with GR100 or PR100 +/− LMB | No differences observed | n.a. | ||
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| HeLa cells transduced with GR100 or PR100 | No differences observed | n.a. | |
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| HeLa cells transfected with | No differences observed | n.a. | [ |
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| Digitonin treated HeLa cells incubated with PR20 and GR20 peptides | Decreased nuclear import | Poly-PR and poly-GR bind and disrupt cargo loading of TPNO1 | [ |
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| HeLa cells incubated with GR20 or PR20 | No differences observed | n.a. | [ |