In vitro FRAP reveals the ATP-dependent nuclear mobilization of the exon junction complex protein SRm160

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Abstract

We present a new in vitro system for characterizing the binding and mobility of enhanced green fluorescent protein (EGFP)-labeled nuclear proteins by fluorescence recovery after photobleaching in digitonin-permeabilized cells. This assay reveals that SRm160, a splicing coactivator and component of the exon junction complex (EJC) involved in RNA export, has an adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent mobility. Endogenous SRm160, lacking the EGFP moiety, could also be released from sites at splicing speckled domains by an ATP-dependent mechanism. A second EJC protein, RNPS1, also has an ATP-dependent mobility, but SRm300, a protein that binds to SRm160 and participates with it in RNA splicing, remains immobile after ATP supplementation. This finding suggests that SRm160-containing RNA export, but not splicing, complexes have an ATP-dependent mobility. We propose that RNA export complexes have an ATP-regulated mechanism for release from binding sites at splicing speckled domains. In vitro fluorescence recovery after photobleaching is a powerful tool for identifying cofactors required for nuclear binding and mobility.

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Wagner, S., Chiosea, S., Ivshina, M., & Nickerson, J. A. (2004). In vitro FRAP reveals the ATP-dependent nuclear mobilization of the exon junction complex protein SRm160. Journal of Cell Biology, 164(6), 843–850. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.200307002

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