JMB-HEADER RAS-JOURNALS EIMB Pleiades Publishing

RUS

             

ENG

YearIMPACT-FACTOR
2022  1,200
2021  1,540
2020  1,374
2019  1,023
2018  0,932
2017  0,977
2016  0,799
2015  0,662
2014  0,740
2013  0,739
2012  0,637
2011  0,658
2010  0,654
2009  0,570
2008  0,849
2007  0,805
2006  0,330
2005  0,435
2004  0,623
2003  0,567
2002  0,641
2001  0,490
2000  0,477
1999  0,762
1998  0,785
1997  0,507
1996  0,518
1995  0,502
Vol 44(2010) N 2 p. 186-201;
S.P. Chumakov1,2, V.S. Prasolov1*

Organization and Regulation of Nucleocytoplasmic Transport

1Engelhardt Institute of Molecular Biology, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, 119991
2Department of Molecular Genetics, Lerner Research Institute, The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, 44195, USA

*prasolov@eimb.ru
Received - 2009-10-12; Accepted - 2009-11-03

Separation of DNA replication and transcription, which occur in the nucleus, from protein synthesis, which occurs in the cytoplasm, allows a more precise regulation of these processes. Selective exchange of macromolecules between the two compartments is mediated by proteins of the nuclear pore complex (NPC). Receptor proteins of the karyopherin family interact with NPC components and transfer their cargos between the nucleus and cytoplasm. Nucleocytoplasmic transport pathways are regulated at multiple levels by modulating the expression or function of individual cargoes, transport receptors, or the transport channel. The regulatory levels have increasingly broad effects on the transport pathways and affect a wide range of processes from gene expression to development and differentiation.

nuclear pore, intracellular transport of macromolecules, karyopherins, nucleoporins, nuclear transport regulation, Ran-dependent transport



JMB-FOOTER RAS-JOURNALS