Homodimerization antagonizes nuclear export of Survivin

Dieuwke Engelsma, Jose A. Rodriguez, Alexander Fish, Giuseppe Giaccone, Maarten Fornerod*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademic

41 Citations (Scopus)
16 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Survivin plays separate roles during different phases of the cell cycle. In mitosis, Survivin is a key regulator of cell division, while in interphase, Survivin is able to protect cells from apoptosis. Survivin shuttles between nucleus and cytoplasm under the influence of one or more nuclear export signals (NESs). Paradoxically, our data show that Survivin poorly binds CRM1 in vitro because hydrophobic residues of the NES are occupied in homodimer contacts. We show that NES-preserving dimerization mutants behave as monomers in solution, show dramatically increased CRM1 binding and are more efficiently exported in vivo than wild-type Survivin. These data indicate that Survivin contains a monomer-specific NES and that dimerization modulates cytoplasmic access of the protein. Our findings have implications for both the mitotic and interphase roles of survivin.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1495-1502
Number of pages8
JournalTraffic
Volume8
Issue number11
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2007
Externally publishedYes

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