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Nucleolus

About: Nucleolus is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 5873 publications have been published within this topic receiving 232435 citations. The topic is also known as: GO:0005730 & cell nucleolus.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A remarkable correlation between cyclin antigen distribution and topographical patterns of DNA synthesis is shown and argues for a role of cyclin in some aspect of DNA replication.

100 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A fifth member of this family of nucleolar proteins, NOP3, is cloned and sequenced and shown to be essential for cell viability, and Northern analysis and pulse-chase labeling indicate that pre-rRNA processing is inhibited at the late steps.
Abstract: The four nucleolar proteins NOP1, SSB1, GAR1, and NSR1 of Saccharomyces cerevisiae share a repetitive domain composed of repeat units rich in glycine and arginine (GAR domain). We have cloned and sequenced a fifth member of this family, NOP3, and shown it to be essential for cell viability. The NOP3 open reading frame encodes a 415 amino acid protein with a predicted molecular mass of 45 kD, containing a GAR domain and an RNA recognition motif. NOP3-specific antibodies recognize a 60-kD protein by SDS-PAGE and decorate the nucleolus and the surrounding nucleoplasm. A conditional lethal mutation, GAL::nop3, was constructed; growth of the mutant strain in glucose medium represses NOP3 expression. In cells depleted of NOP3, production of cytoplasmic ribosomes is impaired. Northern analysis and pulse-chase labeling indicate that pre-rRNA processing is inhibited at the late steps, in which 27SB pre-rRNA is cleaved to 25S rRNA and 20S pre-rRNA to 18S rRNA.

100 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is concluded that UBF is associated both with transcriptionally active and inactive rRNA genes and, therefore, changes in the intracellular localization of UBF are very likely not involved in rDNA transcription regulation.
Abstract: We have characterized an anti-NOR (nucleolar organizer region) serum (P419) from a patient with rheumatoid arthritis and show that it contains antibodies directed against the RNA polymerase I-specific transcription initiation factor UBF. This serum reacts with UBF from a variety of vertebrate cells as revealed both by immunoblotting and by indirect immunofluorescence. We have used the P419 serum to study the intracellular localization of this transcription factor at the light and electron microscopic level. In interphase cells, UBF exhibits a pronounced punctate pattern and is found to be associated with necklace-like structures, which appear to reflect the transcriptionally active state of the nucleolus. Inhibition of rRNA synthetic activity caused either by nutritional starvation or by actinomycin D treatment resulted in a marked decrease in the number and in a significant increase in the size of UBF-positive granules. Under all experimental conditions applied, UBF was exclusively found within the nucleolus and was not released into the nucleoplasm or cytoplasm. During mitosis, UBF was found to be concentrated at the chromosomal NOR indicating that a significant quantity, if not all, of this factor remains bound to the ribosomal transcription units. From this we conclude that UBF is associated both with transcriptionally active and inactive rRNA genes and, therefore, changes in the intracellular localization of UBF are very likely not involved in rDNA transcription regulation.

99 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The present results suggest that the nuclear function of angiogenin may not only be related to rRNA production but also play a role in regulating expression of genes containing CT repeats.
Abstract: Angiogenin undergoes nuclear translocation in endothelial and smooth muscle cells where it accumulates in the nucleolus and binds to DNA. Nuclear translocation of angiogenin is necessary for its biological activity and is mediated by an endocytotic pathway that is independent of the microtubule system and lysosomal processing. Because the nucleolus is a subnuclear organelle containing clusters of transcriptionally active ribosomal RNA genes, we studied the binding of angiogenin to the intergenic spacer of the ribosomal RNA gene where many of the transcription regulatory elements are located. Here we report that angiogenin binds to CT repeats that are abundant in the nontranscribed region of the ribosomal RNA gene. An angiogenin-binding DNA sequence (CTCTCTCTCTCTCTCTCCCTC) has been identified and designated angiogenin-binding element (ABE). ABE binds angiogenin specifically and exhibits angiogenin-dependent promoter activity in a luciferase reporter system. CT repeats, or inverted GA box, which are abundan...

99 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
17 Aug 2015-Nucleus
TL;DR: It is found that the nucleolar compartment is particularly acidic when compared to the surrounding nucleoplasm and, hence, provides the ideal electrochemical environment to bind poly-arginine containing proteins and the same principles apply to cells from insects to man, indicating that this mechanism is highly conserved throughout evolution.
Abstract: The nucleolus is the hallmark of nuclear compartmentalization and has been shown to exert multiple roles in cellular metabolism besides its main function as the place of rRNA synthesis and assembly of ribosomes. Nucleolar proteins dynamically localize and accumulate in this nuclear compartment relative to the surrounding nucleoplasm. In this study, we have assessed the molecular requirements that are necessary and sufficient for the localization and accumulation of peptides and proteins inside the nucleoli of living cells. The data showed that positively charged peptide entities composed of arginines alone and with an isoelectric point at and above 12.6 are necessary and sufficient for mediating significant nucleolar accumulation. A threshold of 6 arginines is necessary for peptides to accumulate in nucleoli, but already 4 arginines are sufficient when fused within 15 amino acid residues of a nuclear localization signal of a protein. Using a pH sensitive dye, we found that the nucleolar compartment is particularly acidic when compared to the surrounding nucleoplasm and, hence, provides the ideal electrochemical environment to bind poly-arginine containing proteins. In fact, we found that oligo-arginine peptides and GFP fusions bind RNA in vitro. Consistent with RNA being the main binding partner for arginines in the nucleolus, we found that the same principles apply to cells from insects to man, indicating that this mechanism is highly conserved throughout evolution.

99 citations


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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023145
2022209
2021143
2020125
2019139
2018121