Nucleoporin 210kDa

Protein-coding gene in the species Homo sapiens From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nuclear pore glycoprotein-210 (gp210) is an essential trafficking regulator in the eukaryotic nuclear pore complex. Gp-210 anchors the pore complex to the nuclear membrane.[5] and protein tagging reveals its primarily located on the luminal side of double layer membrane at the pore. A single polypeptide motif of gp210 is responsible for sorting to nuclear membrane,[6] and indicate the carboxyl tail of the protein is oriented toward the cytoplasmic side of the membrane.

AliasesNUP210, Nup210, GP210, POM210, nucleoporin 210kDa, nucleoporin 210
End13,420,309 bp[1]
Quick facts Identifiers, Aliases ...
Nucleoporin 210kDa
Identifiers
AliasesNUP210, Nup210, GP210, POM210, nucleoporin 210kDa, nucleoporin 210
External IDsOMIM: 607703; MGI: 1859555; HomoloGene: 41286; GeneCards: NUP210; OMA:NUP210 - orthologs
Orthologs
SpeciesHumanMouse
Entrez
Ensembl
UniProt
RefSeq (mRNA)

NM_024923

NM_018815

RefSeq (protein)

NP_079199

NP_061285

Location (UCSC)Chr 3: 13.32 – 13.42 MbChr 6: 90.99 – 91.09 Mb
PubMed search[3][4]
Wikidata
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Disassembly and Assembly

During eukaryotic mitosis the nuclear envelope disintegrates into vesicles dispersing nuclear lamina proteins and nuclear pore complexes. Nup210 is specifically phosphorylated on the C-terminal (cytoplasmic) domain in mitosis at Ser1880[7] and is dispersed throughout the endoplasmic reticulum during mitosis as homodimers.[8] Nuclear lamins begin to reassemble around chromosomes at the end of mitosis.[9] Nup210 lags the reassembly process relative to other Nups.[10] and while much of the assembly process can occur without it, the final assembly and dilation of the complexes require Nup210.[11] The replacement of serine at position 1880 with a phosphorylated 'looking' glutamate results in Nup210 complexes that fail to reassemble indicating that dephosphorylation of Nup210 within the final phases of proper assembly is required.[12]

Pathology

Recognized by anti-nuclear antibodies found in primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) anti-Nup210 antibodies correlate with progression toward end stage liver disease. Nup210 is possibly a destructive autoimmune target of the disease. One idea for the loss of tolerance is the increased or abnormal expression of Nup210 in patients with PBC.[13]

Anti-mitochondrial, anti-centromere and anti-nup62 are also found in PBC.

References

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