| Literature DB >> 30261154 |
Alexandra Sneider1, Jungwon Hah2, Denis Wirtz1, Dong-Hwee Kim2.
Abstract
Cell migration is a highly orchestrated cellular event that involves physical interactions of diverse subcellular components. The nucleus as the largest and stiffest organelle in the cell not only maintains genetic functionality, but also actively changes its morphology and translocates through dynamic formation of nucleus-bound contractile stress fibers. Nuclear motion is an active and essential process for successful cell migration and nucleus self-repairs in response to compression and extension forces in complex cell microenvironment. This review recapitulates molecular regulators that are crucial for nuclear motility during cell migration and highlights recent advances in nuclear deformation-mediated rupture and repair processes in a migrating cell.Entities:
Keywords: Cell migration; Cytoskeleton; LINC complex; Nuclear mechanics
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30261154 PMCID: PMC6527386 DOI: 10.1080/19336918.2018.1506654
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Adh Migr ISSN: 1933-6918 Impact factor: 3.405
Nuclear molecules involved in cell migration.
| Molecular Player | Location | Function | Literature |
|---|---|---|---|
| Refilin | Cytoplasm | A novel family of filamin-binding short-lived | [ |
| Refilin A: promotes the actin-binding filamin A (FLNA) to convert FLNA into an F-actin bundles | |||
| Refilin B: organizes a perinuclear actin cap | |||
| Filamin | Cytoplasm | A downstream effector of the refilin proteins, | |
| Formin | Cytoplasm or within the Nucleus | Involved in nuclear motion during 3D cell migration by modulating cell adhesion and polarization in 3D matrix | |
| Cdc42 | Cytoplasm | Involved in nuclear positioning | [ |
| SUN-1,-2 | INM | Proteins that bind to nuclear lamins are required to position the nucleus by recruiting Syne-1 and Syne-2 to promote centrosome-nucleus coupling | [ |
| The Klarsicht-ANC-1-Syne-Homology (KASH) domain | ONM. | This component of the LINC is involved in the positioning of the nucleus in the cell | |
| Nesprin-1,-2 | ONM | Connected with the actin cytoskeleton | |
| Nesprin-3 | ONM | Moves the nucleus forward to create a pressure gradient in the cell, interacts directly with plectin, and establishes the linkage to the intermediate filaments | [ |
| Nesprin-4 | ONM | Binds to kinesin-1 and positions the MTOC and Golgi for migration | |
| Lamin | Nucleoplasm | Fibrous proteins in a mesh network that connect to chromatin directly or indirectly, | [ |
| Lamin A: contributes to cell invasion, stability, nuclear elasticity, resistance to mechanical stress, gene expression, and differentiation. | |||
| Lamin B: acts as an elastic component of the lamina and restores local deformation |
Figure 1.Molecular factors involved in cell migration. Schematic illustration showing key molecules involved in cell migration at the nuclear envelope and cell boundary. The highlighted signaling pathway depicts the formation of lamellipodia via Arp2/3 (Right). Cdc42: Cell division control protein 42 homolog; WASP: Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein; WAVE: WASP-family Verprolin-Homologous Protein; Arp2/3: Actin-related protein 2/3. The cytoskeleton is anchored to the intranuclear lamina through LINC molecular complexes located in the nuclear membranes (Below). ONM: Outer nuclear membrane; PNS: Perinuclear space; INM: Inner nuclear membrane; KASH: Klarsicht-ANC-1-Syne-Homolog; SUN: Sad1p; UNC-84.
Figure 2.Alteration of nuclear morphology. Diverse morphological changes of the cell nucleus depend on the situation that the cell encounters. The nuclear volume decreases with reduction in osmotic pressure. The perinuclear actin cap aligns the nucleus along actin filaments during directed cell migration. A-type lamin deficiency attenuates nuclear structural integrity of human cells. The karyoplasmic ratio, a ratio of nuclear volume to cell volume (N/C ratio), is kept constant.
Figure 3.Nuclear deformation during cell migration through the extracellular matrix. Cell penetration into the extracellular matrix requires multiple steps: formation of a protrusion at the leading edge and nuclear rotation, nuclear repositioning and interaction with the ECM, myosin-dependent contraction, matrix remodeling, and finally release of adhesion force at the rear of the cell.