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Review
. 2013;23(1):1-10.
doi: 10.1615/critreveukargeneexpr.2013004845.

The nuclear import receptor Kpnβ1 and its potential as an anticancer therapeutic target

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Review

The nuclear import receptor Kpnβ1 and its potential as an anticancer therapeutic target

Pauline J van der Watt et al. Crit Rev Eukaryot Gene Expr. 2013.

Abstract

Many proteins require transport across the nuclear envelope, the physical barrier separating the nucleus from the cytoplasm. Karyopherin β (Kpnβ1) proteins are the major nuclear receptor proteins in the cell that cargo proteins across the nuclear envelope, allowing them to enter and exit the cell nucleus. Karyopherin β1, a major nuclear import receptor, plays an integral role in importing transcription factors, cell signaling proteins, cell cycle proteins, and so forth, into the nucleus, thus playing a crucial role in maintaining normal cell homeostasis. However, cancer cells appear to differentially regulate the expression of the Karyopherin β proteins, presumably in order to maintain increased nuclear transport rates, thus implicating this protein family as a target for cancer therapy. The role of Kpnβ1 in cancer is only now being elucidated, and recent work points to its potential usefulness as an anti-cancer target.

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