| Literature DB >> 32539085 |
Abstract
The metazoan nucleus is equipped with a meshwork of intermediate filament proteins called the A- and B-type lamins. Lamins lie beneath the inner nuclear membrane and serve as a nexus to maintain the architectural integrity of the nucleus, chromatin organization, DNA repair and replication and to regulate nucleocytoplasmic transport. Perturbations or mutations in various components of the nuclear lamina result in a large spectrum of human diseases collectively called laminopathies. One of the most well-characterized laminopathies is Hutchinson-Gilford progeria (HGPS), a rare segmental premature aging syndrome that resembles many features of normal human aging. HGPS patients exhibit alopecia, skin abnormalities, osteoporosis and succumb to cardiovascular complications in their teens. HGPS is caused by a mutation in LMNA, resulting in a mutated form of lamin A, termed progerin. Progerin expression results in a myriad of cellular phenotypes including abnormal nuclear morphology, loss of peripheral heterochromatin, transcriptional changes, DNA replication defects, DNA damage and premature cellular senescence. A key challenge is to elucidate how these different phenotypes are causally and mechanistically linked. In this mini-review, we highlight some key findings and present a model on how progerin-induced phenotypes may be temporally and mechanistically linked.Entities:
Keywords: lamin A; progeria; senescence
Year: 2020 PMID: 32539085 PMCID: PMC7329345 DOI: 10.1042/BST20190882
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biochem Soc Trans ISSN: 0300-5127 Impact factor: 5.407
Figure 1.Doxycycline-inducible expression of progerin in proliferating primary human fibroblasts.
(A) v5-progerin is visualized by anti-v5-antibody (cyan). H3K27me3 staining is indicated in green. Hoechst staining is in blue. Size marker 20 μm. (B) Western blot showing doxycyline-dependent expression of progerin. Lamin A, C, progerin and GAPDH are shown.
Figure 2.Schematic representation of the nuclear envelope and its associated components in normal (no progerin, left side), or progerin-expressing cells (+ progerin, right side).
The nucleus is encapsulated by the inner and outer nuclear membrane (INM, ONM). Cargo is shuttled between the nucleus and cytoplasm by nuclear pore complexes. LEM-domain proteins span the INM and connect it to A- and B-type lamins and peripheral heterochromatin. Progerin retains its farnesyl moiety and remains associated with the INM. Progerin expression results in nuclear abnormalities, heterochromatin decompaction, clustering of nuclear pore complexes, senescence-associated lamin B1 reduction and DNA damage. Center: A speculative model depicting a possible chain of events that commences with an expression of mutant lamin A (progerin), loss of heterochromatin, replication defects and an accumulation of telomeric DNA damage that results in premature cellular senescence.