Skip to main content
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2000 Mar;57(3):411–420. doi: 10.1007/PL00000703

Nucleocytoplasmic shuttling and the control of NF-AT signaling

J Zhu 1, F McKeon* 1
PMCID: PMC11147004  PMID: 10823242

Abstract.

The nuclear factors of activated T cells (NF-ATs) constitute a family of transcription factors that transduce calcium signals in the immune, cardiac, muscular and nervous systems. Like their distant relatives of the Rel family, including NF-κB, NF-ATs are cytoplasmic in resting cells and activated by means of induced nuclear import. Unlike NF-κB, however, NF-ATs show highly dynamic nuclear shuttling properties that have important implications for graded signaling by these molecules. This review focuses on recent advances in deciphering mechanisms by which calcium signaling regulates the nucleo-cytoplasmic shuttling and therefore transactivation functions of the NF-ATs. These discoveries highlight the interplay between nuclear import and export signals on NF-ATs, and the roles of the calcium-activated phosphatase calcineurin and NF-AT kinases in controlling the activity of these signals. They also reveal that NF-ATs, as well as other transcription factors controlled at the level of nuclear import, face the very real prospect of futile cycling across the nuclear envelope as a consequence of conflicting nuclear import and export signals. We discuss the molecular mechanisms by which calcineurin suppresses futile cycling, as well as the major challenges to our understanding of NF-AT signaling in diverse biological systems.

Keywords: Key words. NF-AT; nuclear factor of activated T cells; transcription factor; calcium; calcineurin; CRM1; casein kinase I; NLS; nuclear localization signal; NES; nuclear export signal.


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

RESOURCES