PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Jeffrey Reina AU - Lixin Zhou AU - Marcos R.M. Fontes AU - Nelly Panté AU - Nathalie Cella TI - Identification of a putative nuclear localization signal in maspin protein shed light into its nuclear import regulation AID - 10.1101/474379 DP - 2018 Jan 01 TA - bioRxiv PG - 474379 4099 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/11/20/474379.short 4100 - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2018/11/20/474379.full AB - Maspin (SERPINB5) is a potential tumor suppressor gene with pleiotropic biological activities, including regulation of cell proliferation, death, adhesion, migration and gene expression. Several studies suggest that subcellular localization plays an essential role on maspin tumor suppression activity. In this study we investigated the molecular mechanisms underlying maspin nucleocytoplasmic shuttling. An in vitro nuclear-import assay using digitonin-permeabilized HeLa cells demonstrated that maspin enters the nucleus by an energy-and carrier-independent mechanism. However, previous studies indicated that maspin subcellular localization is regulated in the cell. Using a nuclear localization signal (NLS) prediction software, we identified a putative NLS in the maspin amino acid sequence. To distinguish between passive and regulated nuclear translocation, maspinNLS or the full-length protein (MaspinFL) were fused to 5GFP, rendering the construct too large to enter the nucleus passively. Unexpectedly, 5GFP-maspinNLS, but not maspinFL-5GFP, entered the nucleus of HeLa cells. Dominant-negative Ran-GTPase mutants RanQ69L or RanT24N, suppressed 5GFP-maspinNLS nuclear localization. In summary, we provide evidence that maspin translocates to the nucleus passively. In addition, we identified a peptide in the maspin protein sequence, which is able to drive a 5GFP construct to the nucleus in an energy-dependent manner.