Importin

Importin is a type of karyopherin that transports protein molecules from the cell's cytoplasm to the nucleus. It does so by binding to specific recognition sequences, called nuclear localization sequences (NLS).

Importin subunit alpha-5
Identifiers
SymbolKPNA1
NCBI gene3836
HGNC6394
OMIM600686
RefSeqNP_002255
UniProtP52294
Other data
LocusChr. 3 q21.1
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StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro
Importin subunit beta-1
Identifiers
SymbolKPNB1
NCBI gene3837
HGNC6400
OMIM602738
RefSeqNP_002256
UniProtQ14974
Other data
LocusChr. 17 q21.32
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StructuresSwiss-model
DomainsInterPro

Importin has two subunits, importin α and importin β. Members of the importin-β family can bind and transport cargo by themselves, or can form heterodimers with importin-α. As part of a heterodimer, importin-β mediates interactions with the pore complex, while importin-α acts as an adaptor protein to bind the nuclear localization signal (NLS) on the cargo. The NLS-Importin α-Importin β trimer dissociates after binding to Ran GTP inside the nucleus, with the two importin proteins being recycled to the cytoplasm for further use.

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