干细胞之家 - 中国干细胞行业门户第一站

标题: Lamins and Apoptosis: A Two-Way Street [打印本页]

作者: 杨柳    时间: 2009-3-5 23:37     标题: Lamins and Apoptosis: A Two-Way Street

a Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, The University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 4N1( O0 I; |" s& b5 v% e+ j' `# M

7 W: ]' l8 `2 T9 lCorrespondence to: Brian Burke, Department of Cell Biology and Anatomy, The University of Calgary, 3330 Hospital Drive NW, Calgary AB, Canada T2N 4N1. Tel:(403) 220-7287 Fax:(403) 270-0979 E-mail:bburke@ucalgary.ca.
+ q/ ^( X8 X7 E! `$ O, B
5 \! g7 I0 j& j& ~- s* ~The nuclear lamina is a thin (20 nm) yet insoluble protein meshwork that, in higher cells, lines the nucleoplasmic face of the nuclear envelope (NE).1 The lamina is intimately associated with both the inner nuclear membrane and underlying chromatin, while at the same time providing anchoring sites for nuclear pore complexes (Gerace and Burke 1988 ). Because of these extensive interactions, the lamina has long been considered to play an important role in the maintenance of nuclear architecture. This notion has been lent considerable weight in recent years by the findings that lamina and NE defects are linked to a number of human diseases (Wilson 2000 ). Steen and Collas 2001  (this issue) now provide some tantalizing data that links nuclear lamina organization to cell survival.
; N& P8 j+ k+ b
% v$ ^3 m, N( V7 KThe major components of the nuclear lamina are the A- and B-type lamins. These are intermediate filament protein family members (Stuurman et al. 1998 ) that feature a central coiled-coil flanked by nonhelical head and tail domains. In mammalian somatic cells, there are four major lamins, A, B1, B2, and C. The B-type lamins are encoded by separate genes (LMNB1 and LMNB2) and, as a class, are found in the nuclei of all mammalian somatic cells. Lamins A and C, in contrast, arise through alternative splicing of the same primary transcript encoded by the LMNA gene, expression of which is developmentally regulated. In the mouse, lamins A and C are absent from the early embryo and only appear later during development (Stewart and Burke 1987 ; Roeber et al. 1989 ). Indeed, some cell types never express A-type lamins. Clearly then, A-type lamins are not strictly required for the formation of a nuclear lamina and NE. However, neither are they entirely dispensable. While ablation of the LMNA gene in mice causes no overt developmental abnormalities, it does lead to seriously retarded postnatal growth linked to cardiomyopathy and muscular dystrophy (Sullivan et al. 1999 ). This phenotype is associated with large-scale changes in nuclear architecture. Similar effects have been observed in both Drosophila and Caenorhabditis elegans, where changes in lamin expression lead to gross nuclear structural abnormalities (Lenz-Bohme et al. 1997 ; Liu et al. 2000 ). In humans, defects in the LMNA gene have now been linked to forms of muscular dystrophy and cardiomyopathy as well as to partial lipodystrophy, a disorder affecting adipocyte function (Cohen et al. 2001 ).
% M; ~4 i5 z4 e; n% t! k# G# O6 d( I6 s
During mitosis in higher cells, the NE must be disassembled for the condensed chromosomes to gain access to the mitotic spindle (Moir et al. 2000a ). Disassembly of the lamina is initiated by phosphorylation of S and T residues at either end of the lamin coiled-coil domain (Heald and McKeon 1990 ; Peter et al. 1990 ; Ward and Kirschner 1990 ). This eventually leads to dispersal of A- and B-type lamin homooligomers throughout the mitotic cell (Gerace and Blobel 1980 ). In telophase, the dispersed lamins are recycled to form NEs in each daughter cell. Steen et al. 2000  have previously shown that reassembly of B-type lamins is under the control of both protein phosphatase 1 (PP1) and an A-kinase anchoring protein, AKAP149. The latter is a membrane protein localized to both the ER and nuclear membranes, and contains a specific binding site for PP1. During mitosis, PP1 appears largely chromatin bound, but in telophase it is recruited to the nuclear periphery to dephosphorylate B-type lamins and thereby enable polymerization and lamina assembly. Steen et al. 2000  have demonstrated in vitro that PP1 targeting to the NE involves binding to AKAP149. If this binding is inhibited using a short peptide corresponding to the AKAP149 PP1-binding domain (PP1-BD), then PP1 recruitment to the nuclear periphery does not occur and B-type lamin assembly is effectively abolished. A control peptide containing a V to A substitution  has no effect on this process. This model (Fig 1) predicts that B-type lamins can only polymerize after the reforming nuclear membranes reassociate with chromatin, since membranes are needed to provide AKAP149 activity. In fact, lagging assembly of B-type lamins has been reported in studies using green fluorescent protein–tagged lamin B (Moir et al. 2000b ).$ x( w2 A, h* D, s' F8 }3 D, r( b

4 C3 B9 \; O: G" T& gFigure 1. The proposed roles of PP1 in nuclear lamina reformation. In mitotic telophase, PP1 is recruited to the nuclear periphery (1) via its interaction with AKAP149, a step that is blocked by PP1-BD. PP1 then dephosphorylates B-type lamins (2), allowing them to assemble (3). Disassembled B-type lamins are depicted as predominantly membrane associated during mitosis. (?) Phosphorylated sites within lamin B.0 L0 `) E( K5 {0 x# g& S
. f5 g1 ?3 y4 y
Steen and Collas 2001  have now extended these studies to include intact cells. The approach taken was to employ lipid micelles to introduce either inhibitory or control peptides into HeLa cells arrested in mitosis. Their remarkable results have implications for apoptosis (programmed cell death), as well as nuclear assembly. After introduction of PP1-BD and subsequent release from mitosis, they observed that association of PP1 with the nuclear envelope was blocked and there was a profound inhibition of B-type lamin reassembly. At the same time, A-type lamin assembly was unaffected and a NE still formed. These results exactly match their earlier in vitro data. However, in PP1-BD–treated cells that entered early G1, B-type lamins were rapidly degraded in a caspase-dependent manner. Inhibition of caspase activity revealed that the bulk of the lamin B (both B1 and B2) was mislocalized to the cytoplasm, excluding the trivial possibility that failure to incorporate lamin B into the nuclear lamina was due to lamin degradation. Other NE proteins, including A-type lamins and both emerin and lamin B receptor (two integral inner nuclear membrane proteins), remained intact and were correctly localized in the presence of PP1-BD. However, 6 h after release from mitosis, proteolysis of these proteins commenced. This was accompanied by DNA and nuclear fragmentation and the appearance of highly condensed chromatin, all hallmarks of apoptosis. Thus, PP1-BD treatment of cells before exit from mitosis elicited a delayed apoptotic response. Steen and Collas 2001  speculate that the failure to assemble B-type lamins directly triggers apoptosis, although an additional PP1-dependent process unrelated to lamin assembly cannot yet be ruled out. This is clearly an issue that needs to be addressed.% Y& }! b$ \* N$ ^; {
+ g, C# J! K/ T5 \
Since a NE does assemble in PP1-BD–treated HeLa cells, there can be at best only a minimal requirement for B-type lamins in this process. To determine whether a lamina was required at all for NE reformation, Steen and Collas 2001  examined the effects of PP1-BD on KE37 lymphoblasts, a cell type that does not express A-type lamins. As in HeLa cells, PP1-BD blocked lamin B reassembly during telophase, and the lymphoblasts underwent apoptosis 6 h later. Then came a surprise: when they labeled the KE37 cells with antibodies against lamins A and C they found both of these proteins to be present at the nuclear periphery of those cells that had received PP1-BD, but not in cells treated with the control peptide! It would appear that failure to recruit PP1 to the nuclear periphery at the end of mitosis resulted in the induction of A-type lamin synthesis! Although yet to be demonstrated conclusively, this effect is likely attributable to the inhibition of B-type lamin assembly. It is as if the cell attempts to compensate for failure to assemble B-type lamins by upregulating A-type lamin expression. However, this is ultimately a futile exercise since the cells are committed to apoptosis. This is the first example of LMNA gene activation outside the context of differentiation. The implication is that lamin gene expression may be regulated by the assembly state of the nuclear lamina and/or by unassembled lamin proteins.+ v8 L$ T) k) L0 j0 ~( R" p; w
- Z( N0 p8 v; j; U4 |. s2 d, S
The last few years have witnessed a surge of interest in the biology of the NE driven in part by the findings that several human diseases are linked to defects in both the LMNA and emerin genes. It has become increasingly clear that the nuclear lamina plays a key role in maintenance not only of nuclear envelope integrity but of nuclear architecture as a whole (Cohen et al. 2001 ). Loss of lamin gene expression has been linked to gross changes in nuclear shape and redistribution of heterochromatin (Sullivan et al. 1999 ). These findings, plus lamin interactions with transcriptional repressors such as Rb, further suggest that lamins could potentially modify global patterns of transcription (Cohen et al. 2001 ). Now Steen and Collas 2001  have provided some compelling evidence for a link between lamin B status and the induction of LMNA expression. In cells programmed to die, caspase-dependent degradation of lamins has been recognized as a prelude to nuclear destruction (Lazebnik et al. 1995 ). This new work further suggests that not only is lamin degradation a feature of apoptosis, but that failure to correctly assemble a nuclear lamina is actually a trigger of apoptosis. Clearly, there is still a lot we have to learn about nuclear lamin function.9 Q( X, ]) Y5 R4 m) x) }
0 N' \& m) N; h3 ?* x: _/ q
References
9 D+ T9 I- u+ M3 m8 B2 O( m% [3 T" q4 R2 P7 ~' D
Cohen, M., Lee, K.K., Wilson, K.L., and Gruenbaum, Y. 2001. Transcriptional repression, apoptosis, human disease and the functional evolution of the nuclear lamina. Trends Biochem. Sci 26:41-47.
  k0 e% O1 _. Y7 e, C9 F2 @% c/ z7 ~
Gerace, L., and Blobel, G. 1980. The nuclear envelope lamina is reversibly depolymerized during mitosis. Cell 19:277-287.4 t* [0 F9 P0 s, h4 b2 D4 D

# b, p4 h9 l8 X3 D3 ~* YGerace, L., and Burke, B. 1988. Functional organization of the nuclear envelope. Annu. Rev. Cell Biol. 4:335-374., h6 c1 C7 a2 s: y7 Q0 N
# F. ]7 [4 @6 S$ w
Heald, R., and McKeon, F. 1990. Mutations of phosphorylation sites in lamin A that prevent nuclear lamina disassembly in mitosis. Cell 61:579-589.
4 U( x5 l0 B6 d0 [* I0 n
* K% M# p+ z* R" S* O2 b3 ELazebnik, Y., Takahashi, A., Moir, R., Goldman, R., Poirier, G., Kaufmann, S., and Earnshaw, W. 1995. Studies of the lamin proteinase reveal multiple parallel biochemical pathways during apoptotic execution. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 92:9042-9046.
- j, r$ o+ l* E3 W9 w% `/ v- \4 F: H2 U0 A' U& ]3 b
Lenz-B?hme, B., Wismar, J., Fuchs, S., Reifegerste, R., Buchner, E., Betz, H., and Schmitt, B. 1997. Insertional mutation of the Drosophila nuclear lamin Dm0 gene results in defective nuclear envelopes, clustering of nuclear pore complexes, and accumulation of annulate lamellae. J. Cell Biol. 137:1001-1016.& }; }0 w: j; B; r
9 N! O% c: t4 L' ]
Liu, J., Ben-Shahar, T.R., Riemer, D., Treinin, M., Spann, P., Weber, K., Fire, A., and Gruenbaum, Y. 2000. Essential roles for Caenorhabditis elegans lamin gene in nuclear organization, cell cycle progression, and spatial organization of nuclear pore complexes. Mol. Biol. Cell 11:3937-3947.+ o! ?, D; {+ @- G" L' r
/ [/ v% r" M9 c
Moir, R.D., Spann, T.P., Lopez-Soler, R.I., Yoon, M., Goldman, A.E., Khuon, S., and Goldman, R.D. 2000a. Review: the dynamics of the nuclear lamins during the cell cycle〞relationship between structure and function. J. Struct. Biol 129:324-334.
& {2 [- D* M0 n7 q) f, Y
% Z7 P5 z% Y4 q7 F1 e& DMoir, R.D., Yoon, M., Khuon, S., and Goldman, R.D. 2000b. Nuclear lamins A and B1: different pathways of assembly during nuclear envelope formation in living cells. J. Cell Biol 151:1155-1168.% L; `+ l* [# Z  y

, `/ N, A/ ^% t/ A5 RPeter, M., Nakagawa, J., Dorée, M., Labbé, J.C., and Nigg, E.A. 1990. In vitro disassembly of the nuclear lamina and M phase–specific phosphorylation of lamins by cdc2 kinase. Cell 61:591-602.( U" l4 {7 q& v- S  k2 I: f5 `

7 a$ ]+ e- ]6 Z  [Roeber, R.-A., Weber, K., and Osborn, M. 1989. Differential timing of lamin A/C expression in the various organs of the mouse embryo and the young animal: a developmental study. Development (Camb.) 105:365-378.& T: q5 y6 G7 [7 o& n! H" E
2 h: r- l/ T1 A
Steen, R.L., and Collas, P. 2001. Mistargeting of B-type lamins at the end of mitosis: implications on cell survival and regulation of lamins A/C expression. J. Cell Biol. 153:621-626.
. R% s9 {2 j$ L/ q. t/ K" B- c" X$ K$ A
Steen, R.L., Martins, S.B., Tasken, K., and Collas, P. 2000. Recruitment of protein phosphatase 1 to the nuclear envelope by A-kinase anchoring protein AKAP149 is a prerequisite for nuclear lamina assembly. J. Cell Biol 150:1251-1262.
. L  A( R* f9 p4 F" [& A) ]* B; D7 A$ J: k; F& s- U: N
Stewart, C., and Burke, B. 1987. Teratocarcinoma stem cells and early mouse embryos contain only a single major lamin polypeptide closely resembling lamin B. Cell 51:383-392.
: J! T6 k2 {4 ^/ e" t3 ~+ c3 u) S: y; U6 Y
Stuurman, N., Heins, S., and Aebi, U. 1998. Nuclear lamins: their structure, assembly, and interactions. J. Struct. Biol. 122:42-66.
) Z" D# B/ {: Y( f
8 q& C1 Z6 y" W- j$ }& GSullivan, T., Escalante-Alcalde, D., Bhatt, H., Anver, M., Bhat, N., Nagashima, K., Stewart, C.L., and Burke, B. 1999. Loss of A-type lamin expression compromises nuclear envelope integrity leading to muscular dystrophy. J. Cell Biol 147:913-920." i5 u9 M$ Q" z1 F
2 `' @/ z, D% O  l
Ward, G.E., and Kirschner, M.W. 1990. Identification of cell-cycle regulated phosphorylation sites on nuclear lamin C. Cell 61:561-577.0 W8 O  z- Q# X4 Y, J0 M" F

0 ]" s& R& W7 ~; ^+ Y  |9 gWilson, K.L. 2000. The nuclear envelope, muscular dystrophy and gene expression. Trends Cell Biol 10:125-129.(Brian Burkea)
作者: yukun    时间: 2015-6-12 13:33

干细胞之家
作者: 红旗    时间: 2015-6-12 16:29

呵呵,明白了  
作者: 红旗    时间: 2015-7-7 16:27

爷爷都是从孙子走过来的。  
作者: tuanzi    时间: 2015-7-10 10:10

活着,以死的姿态……  
作者: xuguofeng    时间: 2015-7-13 09:42

干细胞之家 我永远支持
作者: laoli1999    时间: 2015-8-9 13:27

顶你一下,好贴要顶!  
作者: laoli1999    时间: 2015-8-24 11:54

顶一个先  
作者: tuanzi    时间: 2015-9-9 11:42

这个站不错!!  
作者: sky蓝    时间: 2015-10-4 11:43

我想要`~  
作者: dypnr    时间: 2015-10-6 20:27

我在顶贴~!~  
作者: awen    时间: 2015-10-27 18:42

不错不错,我喜欢看  
作者: 123456zsz    时间: 2015-10-28 07:36

谁能送我几分啊  
作者: 泡泡鱼    时间: 2015-11-9 13:33

要不我崇拜你?行吗?  
作者: 123456zsz    时间: 2015-11-11 08:43

淋巴细胞
作者: aakkaa    时间: 2015-11-14 14:09

我帮你 喝喝  
作者: 科研人    时间: 2015-12-18 10:53

也许似乎大概是,然而未必不见得。  
作者: 张佳    时间: 2016-1-10 15:00

帮你项项吧  
作者: 糊涂小蜗牛    时间: 2016-2-24 11:54

来几句吧  
作者: 小敏    时间: 2016-3-1 08:26

我喜欢这个贴子  
作者: 碧湖冷月    时间: 2016-3-8 13:43

免疫细胞治疗  
作者: dogcat    时间: 2016-3-16 19:26

不错不错,我喜欢看  
作者: qibaobao    时间: 2016-3-21 15:52

努力~~各位。。。  
作者: dogcat    时间: 2016-3-26 19:18

好帖子,要顶!
作者: ladybird    时间: 2016-3-29 07:51

每天到干细胞之家看看成了必做的事情
作者: 剑啸寒    时间: 2016-4-15 18:09

帮顶  
作者: highlight    时间: 2016-4-25 20:53

我的啦嘿嘿  
作者: 知足常乐    时间: 2016-4-27 10:18

好 好帖 很好帖 确实好帖 少见的好帖  
作者: 温暖暖    时间: 2016-4-28 10:18

我顶啊。接着顶  
作者: sky蓝    时间: 2016-5-18 09:36

进行溜达一下  
作者: s06806    时间: 2016-5-23 15:27

谢谢楼主啊!
作者: 风云动    时间: 2016-5-28 14:08

任何的限制,都是从自己的内心开始的。  
作者: changfeng    时间: 2016-5-29 18:32

先顶后看  
作者: 再来一天    时间: 2016-6-5 16:27

干细胞抗衰老  
作者: xiao2014    时间: 2016-7-28 18:10

似曾相识的感觉  
作者: SCISCI    时间: 2016-7-30 14:56

必须顶  
作者: 依旧随遇而安    时间: 2016-8-30 18:47

哈哈,看的人少,回一下  
作者: apple0    时间: 2016-10-11 10:54

先看看怎么样!  
作者: 海小鱼    时间: 2016-11-16 21:33

慢慢来,呵呵  
作者: pspvp    时间: 2016-11-30 16:35

赚点分不容易啊  
作者: 追风    时间: 2016-12-26 16:53

支持你加分  
作者: 老农爱科学    时间: 2016-12-27 15:52

干细胞我这辈子就是看好你
作者: 小倔驴    时间: 2016-12-29 21:01

顶也~  
作者: feixue66    时间: 2017-1-13 14:18

支持~~顶顶~~~  
作者: tuanzi    时间: 2017-2-1 04:00

我等你哟!  
作者: 龙水生    时间: 2017-2-1 22:54

挤在北京,给首都添麻烦了……  
作者: youngcell    时间: 2017-2-5 13:35

任何的限制,都是从自己的内心开始的。  
作者: popobird    时间: 2017-2-10 21:37

人之所以能,是相信能。  
作者: 橙味绿茶    时间: 2017-2-11 21:16

原来这样也可以  
作者: 心仪    时间: 2017-2-26 10:27

小心大家盯上你哦  
作者: 龙水生    时间: 2017-3-19 15:35

谢谢分享了!   
作者: whyboy    时间: 2017-3-21 18:02

看或者不看,贴子就在这里,不急不忙  
作者: pcr    时间: 2017-3-28 11:27

说嘛1~~~想说什么就说什么嘛~~  
作者: yunshu    时间: 2017-3-29 04:33

我回不回呢 考虑再三 还是不回了吧 ^_^  
作者: vsill    时间: 2017-4-1 15:42

问渠哪得清如许,为有源头活水来。  
作者: 快乐小郎    时间: 2017-4-2 14:34

我有家的感觉~~你知道吗  
作者: 天蓝色    时间: 2017-4-12 02:24

厉害!强~~~~没的说了!  
作者: 某某人    时间: 2017-4-24 18:27

有才的不在少数啊  
作者: 糊涂小蜗牛    时间: 2017-6-20 16:20

HOHO~~~~~~  
作者: 123456zsz    时间: 2017-6-22 19:44

设置阅读啊  
作者: 心仪    时间: 2017-6-27 19:43

做对的事情比把事情做对重要。  
作者: biodj    时间: 2017-8-3 02:47

越办越好~~~~~~~~~`  
作者: 老农爱科学    时间: 2017-8-8 04:18

好帖,有才  
作者: heart10    时间: 2017-8-15 21:01

原来是这样  
作者: 甘泉    时间: 2017-8-19 01:35

初来乍到,请多多关照。。。  
作者: aliyun    时间: 2017-9-1 05:10

顶的就是你  
作者: MIYAGI    时间: 2017-9-11 17:47

我十目一行也还是看不懂啊  
作者: biobio    时间: 2017-9-15 10:10

这个站不错!!  
作者: feixue66    时间: 2017-9-28 19:16

肿瘤干细胞
作者: SCISCI    时间: 2017-9-29 12:34

风物长宜放眼量  
作者: 甘泉    时间: 2017-10-17 01:01

来几句吧  
作者: popobird    时间: 2017-10-17 02:48

天啊. 很好的资源
作者: SCISCI    时间: 2017-10-28 20:54

帮你顶,人还是厚道点好  
作者: 化药所    时间: 2017-11-19 21:13

一楼的位置好啊..  
作者: 兔兔    时间: 2017-12-16 15:01

拿分走人呵呵,楼下继续!
作者: biodj    时间: 2017-12-22 23:41

不要等到人人都说你丑时才发现自己真的丑。  
作者: dd赤焰    时间: 2017-12-23 13:01

加油啊!!!!顶哦!!!!!  
作者: 咖啡功夫猫    时间: 2018-1-2 03:27

这样的贴子,不顶说不过去啊  
作者: ikiss    时间: 2018-1-7 01:01

我的啦嘿嘿  
作者: yukun    时间: 2018-1-24 05:11

小心大家盯上你哦  
作者: 温暖暖    时间: 2018-1-29 18:43

21世纪,什么最重要——我!  
作者: 科研人    时间: 2018-2-20 09:18

说的不错  
作者: biobio    时间: 2018-2-22 13:01

呵呵 哪天得看看 `~~~~  
作者: bluesuns    时间: 2018-3-12 14:26

谁能送我几分啊  
作者: tempo    时间: 2018-3-25 03:53

哈哈,这么多的人都回了,我敢不回吗?赶快回一个,很好的,我喜欢  
作者: feixue66    时间: 2018-4-4 05:10

不错,看看。  
作者: dada    时间: 2018-4-22 14:10

好贴子好多啊  
作者: tuting    时间: 2018-5-3 09:35

发贴看看自己积分  
作者: feixue66    时间: 2018-6-6 02:33

呵呵,等着就等着....  
作者: syt7000    时间: 2018-6-13 17:48

我的啦嘿嘿  
作者: 坛中酒    时间: 2018-6-18 18:17

不错啊! 一个字牛啊!  
作者: 陈晴    时间: 2018-7-5 05:07

鉴定完毕.!  
作者: tian2006    时间: 2018-7-13 01:20

…没我说话的余地…飘走  
作者: 修复者    时间: 2018-7-17 16:54

围观来了哦  
作者: 墨玉    时间: 2018-7-22 04:25

神经干细胞
作者: 小倔驴    时间: 2018-7-24 19:38

我喜欢这个贴子  
作者: dd赤焰    时间: 2018-7-31 17:01

真是汗啊  我的家财好少啊  加油  
作者: 求索迷茫    时间: 2018-8-20 04:23

很好!很强大!  
作者: dreamenjoyer    时间: 2018-8-22 15:18

这个贴不错!!!!!看了之后就要回复贴子,呵呵  
作者: 365wy    时间: 2018-8-25 07:07

这贴子你会收藏吗  




欢迎光临 干细胞之家 - 中国干细胞行业门户第一站 (http://www.stemcell8.cn/) Powered by Discuz! X1.5