A lamin A/C variant causing striated muscle disease provides insights into filament organization

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Abstract

The LMNA gene encodes the A-type lamins, which polymerize into ∼3.5-nm-thick filaments and, together with B-type lamins and associated proteins, form the nuclear lamina. Mutations in LMNA cause a wide variety of pathologies. In this study, we analyzed the nuclear lamina of embryonic fibroblasts from LmnaH222P/H222P mice, which develop cardiomyopathy and muscular dystrophy. Although the organization of the lamina appeared unaltered, there were changes in chromatin and B-type lamin expression. An increase in nuclear size and consequently a relative reduction in heterochromatin near the lamina allowed for a higher resolution structural analysis of lamin filaments using cryo-electron tomography. This was most apparent when visualizing lamin filaments in situ and using a nuclear extraction protocol. Averaging of individual segments of filaments in LmnaH222P/H222P mouse fibroblasts resolved two polymers that constitute the mature filaments. Our findings provide better views of the organization of lamin filaments and the effect of a striated muscle disease-causing mutation on nuclear structure.

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Kronenberg-Tenga, R., Tatli, M., Eibauer, M., Wu, W., Shin, J. Y., Bonne, G., … Medalia, O. (2021). A lamin A/C variant causing striated muscle disease provides insights into filament organization. Journal of Cell Science, 134(6). https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.256156

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