Characterization of the nuclear localization signal in the DNA helicase involved in Werner's syndrome.
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- Published online on: January 1, 1998 https://doi.org/10.3892/ijmm.1.1.71
- Pages: 71-77
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Abstract
The nuclear localization signal (NLS) of the DNA helicase involved in Werner's syndrome (WS) was studied. Previously, we noted that the C-terminal region of WS helicase contains the NLS. In this study, we generated in HeLa cells various chimeric proteins consisting of the N-terminal tagged with an enhanced green fluorescent protein and the C-terminal fragments of the WS helicase that were truncated either from N- or C-termini, and we examined the ability of fragments to transfer the fusion proteins to the nucleoplasm by fluorescence microscopy. A small C-proximal region containing 34 amino acid residues (residues 1369-1402) was found to contain full nuclear migration activities. Subsequent amino acid substitution experiments showed that a sequence of three positively charged amino acids (Lys1371-Arg1372-Arg1373) in this region are particularly important. Similar sequence has previously been defined as the nuclear localization signal of SV-40 large T antigen that also acts as a viral DNA helicase. Conservation of this motif was found in the C-terminal regions of the other RecQ type DNA helicases, including murine WS helicase, yeast sgs1 and rqh+1 and human Bloom syndrome DNA helicases.