The N-terminal Domain Anchors Human Topoisomerase I at Fibrillar Centers of Nucleoli and Nucleolar Organizer Regions of Mitotic Chromosomes*
Abstract
DNA topoisomerase I releases torsion stress created by DNA transcription. In principle, this activity is required in the nucleoplasm for mRNA synthesis and in the nucleoli for rRNA synthesis. Yet, topoisomerase I is mostly a nucleolar protein. Current belief holds that this preference is triggered by the N-terminal domain of the enzyme, which constitutes a nucleolar import signal. Contradicting this view, we show here that nucleolar accumulation of various fragments of topoisomerase I is correlated with their lesser mobility in this compartment and not with the N-terminal domain being intact or present. Therefore, the N-terminal domain is not likely a nucleolar import signal. We show that it rather serves as an adaptor that anchors a subpopulation of topoisomerase I at fibrillar centers of nucleoli and nucleolar organizer regions of mitotic chromosomes. Thus, it provides a steady association of topoisomerase I with the rDNA and with RNA polymerase I, which is maintained in a living cell during the entire cell cycle.
- GFP
- green fluorescent protein
- PBS
- phosphate-buffered saline
- FRAP
- fluorescence recovery after photobleaching.
- Received May 14, 2002.
- Revision received July 9, 2002.
- The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.











