BN seminar
Location: Room E, F005 (TNW building)
Jaan Männik (BN) will open the ball, followed by Dirk Görlich from the MPI Göttingen (see title and abstract below).
Abstract: The permeability barrier of nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) is
a passive and yet highly efficient sorting device that controls all
exchange between nucleus and cytoplasm. It suppresses the flux of
inert macromolecules > 30 kDa, but also allows rapid passage of even
very large cargoes, provided these are bound to appropriate nuclear
transport receptors (NTRs). FG-repeat domains bind NTRs during
facilitated NPC passage and constitute the crucial elements of this
barrier. They are essential for viability and comprise up to 50 repeat
units. Each unit contains a hydrophobic cluster, typically of the
sequence FG, FxFG or GLFG, surrounded by more hydrophilic spacer
sequences. We observed that FG-repeat domains form FG-hydrogels. These
gels are fascinating materials that display permeability properties
very similar to those of authentic NPCs, allowing an up to 20 000-fold
faster entry of large NTR–cargo complexes as compared to the cargoes
alone. While supporting massive importin- or exportin-mediated cargo
influx, such gels remain firm barriers towards inert objects that lack
nuclear transport signals. This indicates that FG-hydrogels reseal
immediately behind a translocating species and thus possesses "self-
healing" properties. The presentation will further address the
following questions: What is the molecular and structural basis of
barrier formation? Why do the meshes of the barrier open at least 100
times faster in the immediate vicinity of a nuclear transport receptor
than elsewhere in the gel? How do FG repeat domains behave on a
nanoscopic scale, i.e. in authentic NPCs?