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Mol. Cells 2010; 30(1): 65-70

Published online July 14, 2010

https://doi.org/10.1007/s10059-010-0089-9

© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology

A Conserved Motif Controls Nuclear Localization of Drosophila Muscleblind

Juan M. Fernandez-Costa, and Ruben Artero*

Department of Genetics, University of Valencia, Doctor Moliner 50, Valencia, Spain

Correspondence to : *Correspondence: ruben.artero@uv.es

Received: February 16, 2010; Revised: April 6, 2010; Accepted: April 13, 2010

Abstract

Human Muscleblind-like proteins are alternative splicing regulators that are functionally altered in the RNA-media-ted disease myotonic dystrophy. There are different Mus-cleblind protein isoforms in Drosophila and we previ-ously determined that these have different subcellular localizations in the COS-M6 cell line. Here, we describe the conservation of the sequence motif KRAEK in isoforms C and E and propose a specific function for this motif. Different Muscleblind isoforms localize to the peri-plasma membrane (MblA), cytoplasm (MblB), or show no preference for the nuclear or cytoplasmic compartment (MblC and MblD) in Drosophila S2 cells transiently transfected with Musclebind expression plasmids. Mutation of the KRAEK motif reduces MblC nuclear localization, whereas fusion of a single KRAEK motif to the heterologous protein β-galac-tosidase is sufficient to target the reporter protein to the nucleus of S2 cells. This motif is not exclusive to Muscleblind proteins and is detected in several other protein types. Taken together, these results suggest that the KRAEK motif regulates nuclear translocation of Muscleblind and may constitute a new class of nuclear localization signal.

Keywords alternative splicing factor, KRAEK motif, muscleblind, myotonic dystrophy, nuclear localization signal

Article

Research Article

Mol. Cells 2010; 30(1): 65-70

Published online July 31, 2010 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10059-010-0089-9

Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.

A Conserved Motif Controls Nuclear Localization of Drosophila Muscleblind

Juan M. Fernandez-Costa, and Ruben Artero*

Department of Genetics, University of Valencia, Doctor Moliner 50, Valencia, Spain

Correspondence to:*Correspondence: ruben.artero@uv.es

Received: February 16, 2010; Revised: April 6, 2010; Accepted: April 13, 2010

Abstract

Human Muscleblind-like proteins are alternative splicing regulators that are functionally altered in the RNA-media-ted disease myotonic dystrophy. There are different Mus-cleblind protein isoforms in Drosophila and we previ-ously determined that these have different subcellular localizations in the COS-M6 cell line. Here, we describe the conservation of the sequence motif KRAEK in isoforms C and E and propose a specific function for this motif. Different Muscleblind isoforms localize to the peri-plasma membrane (MblA), cytoplasm (MblB), or show no preference for the nuclear or cytoplasmic compartment (MblC and MblD) in Drosophila S2 cells transiently transfected with Musclebind expression plasmids. Mutation of the KRAEK motif reduces MblC nuclear localization, whereas fusion of a single KRAEK motif to the heterologous protein β-galac-tosidase is sufficient to target the reporter protein to the nucleus of S2 cells. This motif is not exclusive to Muscleblind proteins and is detected in several other protein types. Taken together, these results suggest that the KRAEK motif regulates nuclear translocation of Muscleblind and may constitute a new class of nuclear localization signal.

Keywords: alternative splicing factor, KRAEK motif, muscleblind, myotonic dystrophy, nuclear localization signal

Mol. Cells
Dec 31, 2023 Vol.46 No.12, pp. 727~777
COVER PICTURE
Lee et al. (pp. 757-763), show that disruption of ANKS1A promotes the entry of intraflagellar transport trains into cilia, increasing protein transport and forming extracellular vesicles (ECVs). This figure illustrates the abundance of ECVs along the cilia of primary ependymal cells derived from ANKS1A KO mice.

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