The nuclear pore complex (NPC), is a large protein complex giving rise to the nuclear pore. A great number of nuclear pores are studded throughout the nuclear envelope that surrounds the eukaryote cell nucleus. The pores enable the nuclear transport of macromolecules between the nucleoplasm of the nucleus and the cytoplasm of the cell. Small molecules can easily diffuse through the pores. Nuclear transport includes the transportation of RNA and ribosomal proteins from the nucleus to the cytoplasm, and the transport of proteins (such as DNA polymerase and lamins), carbohydrates, signaling molecules, and lipids into the nucleus. Each nuclear pore complex can actively mediate up to 1000 translocations per second.
The nuclear pore complex consists predominantly of a family of proteins known as nucleoporins (Nups). Each pore complex in the human cell nucleus is composed of about 1,000 individual protein molecules, from an evolutionarily conserved set of 35 distinct nucleoporins. The conserved sequences that code for nucleoporins regulate molecular transport through the nuclear pore. Nucleoporin-mediated transport does not entail direct energy expenditure but instead relies on concentration gradients associated with the RAN cycle (Ras-related nuclear protein cycle). In 2022 around 90% of the structure of the human NPC was elucidated in an open and a closed conformation, and published in a special issue of Science, featured on the cover. In 2024 the structure of the nuclear basket was solved, finalising the completion of the structure of the nuclear pore complex.