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Dive into the research topics where C. Patrick Lusk is active.

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Featured researches published by C. Patrick Lusk.


Nature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology | 2007

Highway to the inner nuclear membrane: rules for the road

C. Patrick Lusk; Günter Blobel; Megan C. King

To enter the nucleus a protein must be chaperoned by a transport factor through the nuclear pore complex or it must be small enough to pass through by diffusion. Although these principles have long described the nuclear import of soluble proteins, recent evidence indicates that they also apply to the import of integral inner nuclear membrane proteins. Here we develop a set of rules that might govern the transport of proteins to the inner nuclear membrane.


Cell | 2003

Cell cycle regulated transport controlled by alterations in the nuclear pore complex.

Taras Makhnevych; C. Patrick Lusk; Andrea M. Anderson; John D. Aitchison; Richard W. Wozniak

Eukaryotic cells have developed mechanisms for regulating the nuclear transport of macromolecules that control various cellular events including movement through defined stages of the cell cycle. In yeast cells, where the nuclear envelope remains intact throughout the cell cycle, these transport regulatory mechanisms must also function during mitosis. We have uncovered a mechanism for regulating transport that is controlled by M phase specific molecular rearrangements in the nuclear pore complex (NPC). These changes allow a transport inhibitory nucleoporin, Nup53p, to bind the karyopherin Kap121p specifically during mitosis, slowing its movement through the NPC and inducing cargo release. Yeast strains that possess defects in the function of Kap121p or the fidelity of the inhibitory pathway are delayed in mitosis. We propose that fluctuations in Kap121p transport mediated by the NPC contribute to controlling the subcellular distribution of molecules that direct progression through mitosis.


Cell | 2014

Surveillance of Nuclear Pore Complex Assembly by ESCRT-III/Vps4

Brant M. Webster; Paolo Colombi; Jens Jäger; C. Patrick Lusk

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.


Science | 2011

Long Unfolded Linkers Facilitate Membrane Protein Import Through the Nuclear Pore Complex

Anne C. Meinema; Justyna K. Laba; Rizqiya A. Hapsari; Renee Otten; Frans A. A. Mulder; Annemarie Kralt; Geert van den Bogaart; C. Patrick Lusk; Bert Poolman; Liesbeth M. Veenhoff

Natively unfolded linkers facilitate nuclear membrane protein import. Active nuclear import of soluble cargo involves transport factors that shuttle cargo through the nuclear pore complex (NPC) by binding to phenylalanine-glycine (FG) domains. How nuclear membrane proteins cross through the NPC to reach the inner membrane is presently unclear. We found that at least a 120-residue-long intrinsically disordered linker was required for the import of membrane proteins carrying a nuclear localization signal for the transport factor karyopherin-α. We propose an import mechanism for membrane proteins in which an unfolded linker slices through the NPC scaffold to enable binding between the transport factor and the FG domains in the center of the NPC.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2002

Karyopherins in nuclear pore biogenesis: a role for Kap121p in the assembly of Nup53p into nuclear pore complexes

C. Patrick Lusk; Taras Makhnevych; Marcello Marelli; John D. Aitchison; Richard W. Wozniak

The mechanisms that govern the assembly of nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) remain largely unknown. Here, we have established a role for karyopherins in this process. We show that the yeast karyopherin Kap121p functions in the targeting and assembly of the nucleoporin Nup53p into NPCs by recognizing a nuclear localization signal (NLS) in Nup53p. This karyopherin-mediated function can also be performed by the Kap95p–Kap60p complex if the Kap121p-binding domain of Nup53p is replaced by a classical NLS, suggesting a more general role for karyopherins in NPC assembly. At the NPC, neighboring nucleoporins bind to two regions in Nup53p. One nucleoporin, Nup170p, associates with a region of Nup53p that overlaps with the Kap121p binding site and we show that they compete for binding to Nup53p. We propose that once targeted to the NPC, dissociation of the Kap121p–Nup53p complex is driven by the interaction of Nup53p with Nup170p. At the NPC, Nup53p exists in two separate complexes, one of which is capable of interacting with Kap121p and another that is bound to Nup170p. We propose that fluctuations between these two states drive the binding and release of Kap121p from Nup53p, thus facilitating Kap121ps movement through the NPC.


Cell | 2016

Ultra-High Resolution 3D Imaging of Whole Cells

Fang Huang; George Sirinakis; Edward S. Allgeyer; Lena K. Schroeder; Whitney C. Duim; Emil B. Kromann; Thomy Phan; Felix Rivera-Molina; Jordan R. Myers; Irnov Irnov; Mark Lessard; Yongdeng Zhang; Mary Ann Handel; Christine Jacobs-Wagner; C. Patrick Lusk; Derek Toomre; Martin J. Booth; Joerg Bewersdorf

Summary Fluorescence nanoscopy, or super-resolution microscopy, has become an important tool in cell biological research. However, because of its usually inferior resolution in the depth direction (50–80 nm) and rapidly deteriorating resolution in thick samples, its practical biological application has been effectively limited to two dimensions and thin samples. Here, we present the development of whole-cell 4Pi single-molecule switching nanoscopy (W-4PiSMSN), an optical nanoscope that allows imaging of three-dimensional (3D) structures at 10- to 20-nm resolution throughout entire mammalian cells. We demonstrate the wide applicability of W-4PiSMSN across diverse research fields by imaging complex molecular architectures ranging from bacteriophages to nuclear pores, cilia, and synaptonemal complexes in large 3D cellular volumes.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2007

The role of karyopherins in the regulated sumoylation of septins

Taras Makhnevych; Christopher Ptak; C. Patrick Lusk; John D. Aitchison; Richard W. Wozniak

In the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, several components of the septin ring are sumoylated during anaphase and then abruptly desumoylated at cytokinesis. We show that septin sumoylation is controlled by the interactions of two enzymes of the sumoylation pathway, Siz1p and Ulp1p, with the nuclear transport machinery. The E3 ligase Siz1p is imported into the nucleus by the karyopherin Kap95p during interphase. In M phase, Siz1p is exported from the nucleus by the karyopherin Kap142p/Msn5p and subsequently targeted to the septin ring, where it participates in septin sumoylation. We also show that the accumulation of sumoylated septins during mitosis is dependent on the interactions of the SUMO isopeptidase Ulp1p with Kap121p and Kap95p–Kap60p and the nuclear pore complex (NPC). In addition to sequestering Ulp1 at the NPC, Kap121p is required for targeting Ulp1p to the septin ring during mitosis. We present a model in which Ulp1p is maintained at the NPC during interphase and transiently interacts with the septin ring during mitosis.


Molecular Biology of the Cell | 2011

Lumenal interactions in nuclear pore complex assembly and stability

William T. Yewdell; Paolo Colombi; Taras Makhnevych; C. Patrick Lusk

A mechanism of nuclear pore complex assembly into intact nuclear envelopes remains elusive. We explore roles of conserved inner nuclear membrane proteins, Heh1p and Heh2p, in this process. The data support the existence of a lumenal bridge between Heh1p and the nucleoporin Pom152p, which might facilitate early nuclear pore complex assembly events.


Traffic | 2007

Nup53p is a Target of Two Mitotic Kinases, Cdk1p and Hrr25p

C. Patrick Lusk; Daniel D. Waller; Taras Makhnevych; Axel Dienemann; Malcolm Whiteway; David Y. Thomas; Richard W. Wozniak

Nuclear pore complexes (NPCs) form channels across the nuclear envelope and provide the sole sites of molecular exchange between the cytoplasm and nucleoplasm. The NPC is a target of a number of post‐translational modifications, including phosphorylation, yet the functions of these modifications are ill defined. Here, we have investigated the mitotic specific phosphorylation of a yeast nucleoporin Nup53p. Two kinases were identified that phosphorylate Nup53p: the mitotic kinase Cdk1p/Cdc2p/Cdc28p and the casein kinase Hrr25p. Hrr25p was identified by screening 119 yeast kinases for their ability to phosphorylate Nup53p in vitro. Conditional alleles of Hrr25p support the conclusion that Hrr25p phosphorylates Nup53p in vivo. We further demonstrated using solution binding and affinity purification assays, that Hrr25p directly binds Nup53p in an interaction that is destabilized by the phosphorylation of Nup53p. Consistent with this observation, we observed that Hrr25p moves between distinct locations in the cell during the cell cycle including the nucleus, the cortex of the emerging bud and the spindle pole bodies. Cdk1p also contributes to Nup53p phosphorylation as specific inhibition of Cdk1p or mutation of Cdk1p consensus sites partially blocked its phosphorylation. The ability of nup53 alleles containing Cdk1p site mutations to complement synthetic defects of nup53Δnup170Δ strains is linked to a function for Nup53p in the spindle assembly checkpoint.


Journal of Cell Biology | 2013

The transmission of nuclear pore complexes to daughter cells requires a cytoplasmic pool of Nsp1

Paolo Colombi; Brant M. Webster; Florian Fröhlich; C. Patrick Lusk

A cytoplasmic pool of Nsp1 is targeted to the bud in a Myo2-dependent manner and is required for nuclear pore complex inheritance by daughter cells.

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