Probing nuclear pore complex architecture with proximity-dependent biotinylation
Sanford Research · Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Proximity-dependent biotin identification (BioID) is a method for identifying protein associations that occur in vivo. By fusing a promiscuous biotin ligase to a protein of interest expressed in living cells, BioID permits the labeling of proximate proteins during a defined labeling period. In this study we used BioID to study the human nuclear pore complex (NPC), one of the largest macromolecular assemblies in eukaryotes. Anchored within the nuclear envelope, NPCs mediate the nucleocytoplasmic trafficking of numerous cellular components. We applied BioID to constituents of the Nup107-160 complex and the Nup93 complex, two conserved NPC subcomplexes. A strikingly different set of NPC constituents was detected…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 13.70
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 64
Authors
6Topics & keywords
- Nuclear pore
- Biotinylation
- Biology
- Computational biology
- Biotin
- Cell biology
- Molecular biology
- Genetics