Cell
Volume 141, Issue 6, 11 June 2010, Pages 1030-1041
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Article
Cell Cycle-Dependent Differences in Nuclear Pore Complex Assembly in Metazoa

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Summary

In metazoa, nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) assemble from disassembled precursors into a reforming nuclear envelope (NE) at the end of mitosis and into growing intact NEs during interphase. Here, we show via RNAi-mediated knockdown that ELYS, a nucleoporin critical for the recruitment of the essential Nup107/160 complex to chromatin, is required for NPC assembly at the end of mitosis but not during interphase. Conversely, the transmembrane nucleoporin POM121 is critical for the incorporation of the Nup107/160 complex into new assembly sites specifically during interphase. Strikingly, recruitment of the Nup107/160 complex to an intact NE involves a membrane curvature-sensing domain of its constituent Nup133, which is not required for postmitotic NPC formation. Our results suggest that in organisms with open mitosis, NPCs assemble via two distinct mechanisms to accommodate cell cycle-dependent differences in NE topology.

Highlights

► Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) assemble by two distinct mechanisms in metazoa ► The nucleoporin ELYS is specifically required for NPC assembly at the end of mitosis ► POM121 is involved in fusion of inner and outer nuclear membranes during interphase ► Membrane curvature-sensing domain of Nup133 is critical for interphase assembly

CELLBIO
CELLCYCLE

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These authors contributed equally to this work