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Nuclear Import/Export Receptor Nuclear transport receptors constantly shuttle cargo between the nucleus and the cytoplasm through nuclear pore complexes. In the nucleus, RanGTP promotes the dissociation of cargo from importins, which import cargo into the nucleus (where RanGTP is guanosine 5′ triphosphate–bound Ran). Conversely, nuclear RanGTP promotes cargo-binding to exportins, which export cargo from the nucleus. Cargo is released from exportins in the cytoplasm upon hydrolysis of RanGTP. Cytoplasmically assembled RNA splicing components enter the nucleus together with an import adapter snurportin 1 (SPN1), but how then does the import adapter release its cargo and exit the nucleus to collect further cargo? The nuclear exportin CRM1 exports a broad range of substrates—including SPN1, ribosomes, and many regulatory proteins. Monecke et al. (p. 1087 ) describe the crystal structure of CRM1 bound to SPN1 and RanGTP. The structure shows that SPN1 cannot simultaneously bind its import cargo and the exportin CRM1, ensuring that only cargo-free SPN1 is returned to the cytoplasm. There are no direct contacts between Ran and SPN1 in the ternary complex, suggesting that RanGTP promotes cargo-binding through long-range conformational changes in CRM1.
Monecke et al. (Fri,) studied this question.