Cell
Volume 159, Issue 2, 9 October 2014, Pages 388-401
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Article
Surveillance of Nuclear Pore Complex Assembly by ESCRT-III/Vps4

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2014.09.012Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • There is a surveillance mechanism that ensures proper nuclear pore complex assembly

  • A quality control compartment prevents the inheritance of malformed NPCs

  • ESCRT-III is recruited to the nuclear envelope by inner nuclear membrane proteins

  • Vps4 clears defective NPC intermediates via proteasomal degradation

Summary

The maintenance of nuclear compartmentalization by the nuclear envelope and nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) is essential for cell function; loss of compartmentalization is associated with cancers, laminopathies, and aging. We uncovered a pathway that surveils NPC assembly intermediates to promote the formation of functional NPCs. Surveillance is mediated by Heh2, a member of the LEM (Lap2-emerin-MAN1) family of integral inner nuclear membrane proteins, which binds to an early NPC assembly intermediate, but not to mature NPCs. Heh2 recruits the endosomal sorting complex required for transport (ESCRT)—III subunit Snf7 and the AAA-ATPase Vps4 to destabilize and clear defective NPC assembly intermediates. When surveillance or clearance is compromised, malformed NPCs accumulate in a storage of improperly assembled nuclear pore complexes compartment, or SINC. The SINC is retained in old mothers to prevent loss of daughter lifespan, highlighting a continuum of mechanisms to ensure nuclear compartmentalization.

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