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Microtubule forces drive nuclear damage in LMNA cardiomyopathy.

Daria Amiad PavlovCarmen Suay CorrederaMohammad DehghanyJulie HefflerKaitlyn M ShenNoam Zuela-SopilniakRani RandellKeita UchidaRajan JainVivek B ShenoyJan LammerdingBenjamin L Prosser
Published in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2024)
Nuclear homeostasis requires a balance of forces between the cytoskeleton and nucleus. Variants in LMNA disrupt this balance by weakening the nuclear lamina, resulting in nuclear damage in contractile tissues and ultimately muscle disease. Intriguingly, disrupting the LINC complex that connects the cytoskeleton to the nucleus has emerged as a promising strategy to ameliorate LMNA cardiomyopathy. Yet how LINC disruption protects the cardiomyocyte nucleus remains unclear. To address this, we developed an assay to quantify the coupling of cardiomyocyte contraction to nuclear deformation and interrogated its dependence on the lamina and LINC complex. We found that the LINC complex was surprisingly dispensable for transferring the majority of contractile strain into the nucleus, and that increased nuclear strain in Lmna- deficient myocytes was not rescued by LINC disruption. However, LINC disruption eliminated the cage of microtubules encircling the nucleus, and disrupting microtubules was sufficient to prevent nuclear damage induced by LMNA deficiency. Through computational modeling we simulated the mechanical stress fields surrounding cardiomyocyte nuclei and show how microtubule compression exploits local vulnerabilities to damage LMNA -deficient nuclei. Our work pinpoints localized, microtubule-dependent force transmission through the LINC complex as a pathological driver and therapeutic target for LMNA cardiomyopathy.
Keyphrases
  • long non coding rna
  • long noncoding rna
  • cell proliferation
  • muscular dystrophy
  • heart failure
  • dna methylation
  • endothelial cells
  • single cell
  • atrial fibrillation
  • genome wide