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JCS ePress online publication date 4 Mar 2008
doi: 10.1242/jcs.022103


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Research Article

Structural basis for the nuclear import of the human androgen receptor


Mark L. Cutress, Hayley C. Whitaker, Ian G. Mills, Murray Stewart, and David E. Neal*
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: den22{at}medschl.cam.ac.uk)

Ligand-dependent nuclear import is crucial for the function of the androgen receptor (AR) in both health and disease. The unliganded AR is retained in the cytoplasm but, on binding 5{alpha}-dihydrotestosterone, it translocates into the nucleus and alters transcription of its target genes. Nuclear import of AR is mediated by the nuclear import factor importin-{alpha}, which functions as a receptor that recognises and binds to specific nuclear localisation signal (NLS) motifs on cargo proteins. We show here that the AR binds to importin-{alpha} directly, albeit more weakly than the NLS of SV40 or nucleoplasmin. We describe the 2.6-Å-resolution crystal structure of the importin-{alpha}-AR-NLS complex, and show that the AR binds to the major NLS-binding site on importin-{alpha} in a manner different from most other NLSs. Finally, we have shown that pathological mutations within the NLS of AR that are associated with prostate cancer and androgen-insensitivity syndrome reduce the binding affinity to importin-{alpha} and, subsequently, retard nuclear import; surprisingly, however, the transcriptional activity of these mutants varies widely. Thus, in addition to its function in the nuclear import of AR, the NLS in the hinge region of AR has a separate, quite distinct role on transactivation, which becomes apparent once nuclear import has been achieved.







© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2008