| Literature DB >> 26303512 |
Anna Mattout1, Daphne S Cabianca2, Susan M Gasser3,4.
Abstract
The spatial distribution of chromatin domains in interphase nuclei changes dramatically during development in multicellular organisms. A crucial question is whether nuclear organization is a cause or a result of differentiation. Genetic perturbation of lamina-heterochromatin interactions is helping to reveal the cross-talk between chromatin states and nuclear organization.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26303512 PMCID: PMC4549078 DOI: 10.1186/s13059-015-0747-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol ISSN: 1474-7596 Impact factor: 13.583
The basic characteristics of the lamins
| Lamin type | Genes (in mammalsa) | Major isoforms/(minor isoforms) | Processing of the C-terminus | Isoelectric point (pK) and solubility in mitosis | Expression |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A-type lamin |
| Lamin A | Lamin A and AΔ10 have a CaaX motif that is farnesylated and ultimately cleaved with an additional 15 residues from the C-terminus | pK neutral | Lamins A and C are expressed in most somatic differentiated cells Lamin C2 is expressed in germ cells |
| Lamin C | Lamin C and C2 have no CaaX motif | Soluble during mitosis | |||
| (Lamin AΔ10 Lamin C2) | |||||
| B-type lamin |
| Lamin B1 | B-type lamins have a CaaX motif that is farnesylated and carboxymethylated on the cysteine, whereas the (aaX) part of the motif is removed | pK acidic | Lamins B1 and B2 are expressed in most or all somatic cells, but lamin B1 is notably absent from muscle cells. Lamin B3 is found in germ cells |
|
| Lamin B2 | The farnesyl group is essential but not sufficient for the peripheral localization of B-type lamins | Membrane-bound in mitosis | ||
| (Lamin B3) |
The worm Caenorhabditis elegans has a single lamin gene (lmn-1) encoding a protein that has features of both A-type and B-type lamins
Fig. 1Lamin structure. A schematic sketch of a generic lamin protein, highlighting the important structural features. The N-terminal head domain is short and mostly unstructured, and also contains a conserved phosphorylation site flanking the rod domain, which is important for lamin polymer disassembly and reassembly during mitosis. Another phosphorylation site is situated at the other extremity of the rod domain. The central rod domain is mainly composed of α-helices, consisting of four coiled coils, interrupted by flexible linker domains. The rod domain is essential for the dimerization of lamin, which is the first step required for the assembly of lamin filaments. The C-terminal tail domain of lamin protein includes a structured immunoglobulin-like domain, structurally well conserved among species, as well as the evolutionarily conserved nuclear localization signal (NLS) and CaaX motifs ("C" stands for cysteine, "a" any aliphatic amino acid, and the identity of "X" determines the enzyme that acts on the protein). In lamin the motif is recognized by a farnesyltransferase. Arrows under the sketch indicate the position of the two EDMD causing mutations on the lamin protein discussed in the review, and of the most common HGPS (progeria) mutation G608G. Δ32K in mice corresponds to the deletion of the lysine 32, which corresponds to Δ46K in C. elegans. Y59C is a missense mutation at the beginning of the rod domain in C. elegans lamin, analogous to the 45C mutation in human lamin A/C. The hundreds of other mutations leading to laminopathies are spread almost all over the lamin protein [151]
Fig. 2Histone modifications regulate perinuclear sequestration. A model of known and suggested histone tail modifications involved in heterochromatin anchoring at the nuclear envelope. The deposition of histones carrying H3K9me1 or H3K9me2 could be sufficient to ensure localization at the nuclear envelope according to work with the worm Caenorhabditis elegans [74]. Potential methyl readers that might contribute to anchoring include the lamin B receptor (LBR) in mammals and a C. elegans chromodomain protein (CEC-x) in worms. Readers of the H3K9me3 modification that ensure silencing include worm homologs of heterochromatin protein 1 (HP1) and LIN-61. Other factors implicated in tissue-specific gene repression and sequestration include cKROX and HDAC3, or an unknown reader of H4K20me3. See text for further details
Classification of the laminopathiesa
| Affected tissue/phenotype | Disease | Full name/description | OMIM code |
|---|---|---|---|
| Muscle | EDMD2 | Autosomal-dominant Emery–Dreifuss muscular dystrophy | #181350 |
| EDMD3 | Autosomal-recessive Emery–Dreifuss muscular dystrophy | #604929 | |
| LGMD1B | Limb girdle muscular dystrophy type 1B | #159001 | |
| CMD1A | Dilated cardiomyopathy 1A | #115200 | |
| CCD | Cardiac and conduction defect | ||
| AD-SMA | Autosomal-dominant spinal muscular atrophy | ||
| LAF | Lone atrial fibrillation | ||
| Generalized muscular dystrophy and/or cardiomyopathy phenotype | |||
| dropped head syndrome | |||
| Fat | FPLD1 | Familiar partial lipodystrophy TYPE 1 | #608600 |
| FPLD2 | Familiar partial lipodystrophy TYPE 2 | #151600 | |
| Generalized lipodystrophy phenotype | |||
| Neuronal | CMT2B1 | Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 2B1 | #605588 |
| Generalized neuropathy phenotype | |||
| Multisystem | MADA | Mandibuloacral dysplasia | #248370 |
| RD | Restrictive dermopathy | #176670 | |
| Generalized metabolic syndrome phenotype | |||
| Slovenian type heart-hand syndrome | |||
| Premature aging | HGPS | Hutchinson–Gilford progeria syndrome | #176670 |
| WRN-like | Atypical Werner syndrome | #277700 | |
| LIRLLC/LDHCP | Generalized lipoatrophy, insulin-resistant diabetes, disseminated leuko-melanodermic papules | #608056 | |
| Liver steatosis and cardiomyopathy |
List of human genetic diseases and disorders caused by mutations in the LMNA gene, classified by type of tissue affected (see also [151])