4.8 Article

Association of RanGAP to nuclear pore complex component, RanBP2/Nup358, is required for pupal development in Drosophila

Journal

CELL REPORTS
Volume 37, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.celrep.2021.110151

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Funding

  1. NICHD [ZIAHD001902, ZIAHD008954]

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The localization of RanGAP to the nuclear envelope is widely conserved in multicellular organisms, but the specific targeting mechanisms vary. In Drosophila, it was found that RanGAP requires binding to a specific nucleoporin for its function and plays a crucial role in pupal development.
Ran's GTPase-activating protein (RanGAP) is tethered to the nuclear envelope (NE) in multicellular organisms. We investigated the consequences of RanGAP localization in human tissue culture cells and Drosophila. In tissue culture cells, disruption of RanGAP1 NE localization surprisingly has neither obvious impacts on viability nor nucleocytoplasmic transport of a model substrate. In Drosophila, we identified a region within nucleoporin dmRanBP2 required for direct tethering of dmRanGAP to the NE. A dmRanBP2 mutant lacking this region shows no apparent growth defects during larval stages but arrests at the early pupal stage. A direct fusion of dmRanGAP to the dmRanBP2 mutant rescues this arrest, indicating that dmRanGAP recruitment to dmRanBP2 per se is necessary for the pupal ecdysis sequence. Our results indicate that while the NE localization of RanGAP is widely conserved in multicellular organisms, the targeting mechanisms are not. Further, we find a requirement for this localization during pupal development.

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