Yi-ying Chou,Srigokul Upadhyayula,Justin Houser,Kangmin He,Wesley Skillern,Gustavo Scanavachi,Song Dang,Anwesha Sanyal,Kazuka G. Ohashi,Giuseppe Di Caprio,Alex J. B. Kreutzberger,Tegy John Vadakkan,Tom Kirchhausen
Nuclear envelope assembly during late mitosis includes rapid formation of several thousand complete nuclear pore complexes (NPCs). This efficient use of NPC components (nucleoporins or NUPs) is essential for ensuring immediate nucleocytoplasmic communication in each daughter cell. We show that octameric subassemblies of outer and inner nuclear pore rings remain intact in the mitotic endoplasmic reticulum (ER) after NPC disassembly during prophase. These inherited subassemblies then incorporate into NPCs during post-mitotic pore formation. We further show that the stable subassemblies persist through multiple rounds of cell division and the accompanying rounds of NPC mitotic disassembly and post-mitotic assembly. De novo formation of NPCs from newly synthesized NUPs during interphase will then have a distinct initiation mechanism. We postulate that a yet-to-be-identified modification marks and immortalizes one or more components of the specific octameric outer and inner ring subcomplexes that then template post-mitotic NPC assembly during subsequent cell cycles.