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. 1999 Feb 1;246(2):461-70.
doi: 10.1006/excr.1998.4267.

Spatial organization of four hnRNP proteins in relation to sites of transcription, to nuclear speckles, and to each other in interphase nuclei and nuclear matrices of HeLa cells

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Spatial organization of four hnRNP proteins in relation to sites of transcription, to nuclear speckles, and to each other in interphase nuclei and nuclear matrices of HeLa cells

K A Mattern et al. Exp Cell Res. .

Abstract

RNA polymerase II transcripts are complexed with heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein (hnRNP) proteins. These proteins are involved in several aspects of the maturation and transport of hnRNA. We performed a detailed study of the spatial distribution of four hnRNP proteins (hnRNP C, I, L, and U) in HeLa nuclei, using immunofluorescent labeling and confocal microscopy. Despite the fact that hnRNP proteins have been shown to coimmunoprecipitate, a hallmark of hnRNP proteins, we find that hnRNP C, I, and L have a spatial nuclear distribution that is not related to that of hnRNP U. We also examined the distribution of hnRNP proteins in relation to that of nascent transcripts. The four hnRNP proteins that we examined are not enriched at sites of RNA synthesis. Using antibodies against the nuclear poly(A)-binding protein (PAB II) we investigated the relationship between the distribution of hnRNP proteins and that of nuclear domains (nuclear speckles) that are enriched in splicing factors, poly(A)+RNA, and PAB II. We found that the four hnRNP proteins are not enriched in these domains. This indicates that the poly(A)+RNA, present in high concentration in speckles, is not complexed with these hnRNP proteins. This is in agreement with the notion that poly(A)+RNA in speckles is different from ordinary hnRNA. Previously, we have shown that hnRNP proteins are the major protein components of the fibrogranular internal nuclear matrix (K. A. Mattern et al. (1996) J. Cell. Biochem. 62, 275-289; K. A. Mattern et al. (1997) J. Cell. Biochem. 65, 42-52). We observed that in nuclear matrices the spatial distributions of the four hnRNP proteins, like that of nascent RNA and PAB II, are essentially the same as observed in intact nuclei. Moreover, also in nuclear matrix preparations, like in intact nuclei, nascent RNA and PAB II have spatial distributions that differ from those of hnRNP proteins. Our results are compatible with the notion that hnRNP proteins are able to form complexes of many different, probably overlapping, compositions.

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