A potential role for genome structure in the translation of mechanical force during immune cell development

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Abstract

Immune cells react to a wide range of environments, both chemical and physical. While the former has been extensively studied, there is growing evidence that physical and in particular mechanical forces also affect immune cell behavior and development. In order to elicit a response that affects immune cell behavior or development, environmental signals must often reach the nucleus. Chemical and mechanical signals can initiate signal transduction pathways, but mechanical forces may also have a more direct route to the nucleus, altering nuclear shape via mechanotransduction. The three-dimensional organization of DNA allows for the possibility that altering nuclear shape directly remodels chromatin, redistributing critical regulatory elements and proteins, and resulting in wide-scale gene expression changes. As such, integrating mechanotransduction and genome architecture into the immunology toolkit will improve our understanding of immune development and disease.

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Jacobson, E., Perry, J. K., Long, D. S., Vickers, M. H., & O’Sullivan, J. M. (2016, September 2). A potential role for genome structure in the translation of mechanical force during immune cell development. Nucleus. Taylor and Francis Inc. https://doi.org/10.1080/19491034.2016.1238998

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