In the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe, the nucleus is tethered to the cytoskeleton by KASH domain-containing proteins in the outer nuclear membrane and SUN domain-containing proteins in the inner nuclear membrane. By exerting force on these SUN-KASH complexes, the cytoskeleton controls the position of the nucleus within the cell. Centromeric DNA inside the nucleus has been observed to cluster near SUN-KASH complexes during interphase, raising the possibility that this association mediates a functional connection to the cytoskeleton. King et al. have identified an inner nuclear membrane protein (Ima1) in S. pombe that links DNA to SUN-KASH complexes. They show that Ima1 binds to centromeric DNA in vitro and colocalizes with the SUN domain-containing protein Sad1 at the inner nuclear membrane; in Ima1-deficient yeast, colocalization between centromeric DNA and Sad1 was disrupted, and nuclei were frequently deformed and asymmetric. The authors propose that these protein-protein interactions may therefore be required to maintain nuclear shape and integrity in the face of cytoplasmic tensioners and provide a means by which cytoskeletal forces contribute to organizing DNA within the nucleus
Sources:
Cell 134, 427 (2008)
Tags
- cancer (1)
- Drug Discovery (1)
- Events (9)
- Genetics (1)
- Genome (3)
- Genomics (1)
- Molecular Biology (7)
- Post Doc (6)
- Proteomics (1)
- RNAi (1)
- Techniques (1)
Nuclear Membrane Mechanics
September 01, 2008Postado por Admin às 3:55 AM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
0 comentários:
Post a Comment