The endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondria, and chloroplasts contain proteinaceous structures embedded in their membranes that allow proteins to pass through without contacting the surrounding hydrophobic lipids. Figure 8.2 shows that a substrate protein binds directly to the structure, is transported by it to the other side, and then released.
Peroxisomes also have such structures in their membranes, but the substrate proteins do not bind directly to them. Figure 8.3 shows that instead they bind to carrier proteins in the cytosol, the carrier protein is transported through the channel into the peroxisome, and then the substrate protein is released.
For transport into the nucleus, a much larger and more complex structure is employed. This is the nuclear pore. Figure 8.4 shows that, although the pore provides the environment that allows a substrate to enter (or to leave) the nucleus, it does not actually provide the apparatus that binds to the substrate proteins and moves them through. Included in this apparatus are carrier proteins that bind to the substrates and transport them through the pore to the other side.