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Nesprin-1 LINC complexes recruit microtubule cytoskeleton proteins and drive pathology in Lmna mutant striated muscle.

Ei Leen LeongNyein Thet KhaingBruno CadotWei Liang HongSerguei KozlovHendrikje WernerEsther Sook Min WongColin L StewartBrian E BurkeYin Loon Lee
Published in: Human molecular genetics (2022)
Mutations in LMNA, the gene encoding A-type lamins, cause laminopathies-diseases of striated muscle and other tissues. The aetiology of laminopathies has been attributed to perturbation of chromatin organization or structural weakening of the nuclear envelope (NE) such that the nucleus becomes more prone to mechanical damage. The latter model requires a conduit for force transmission to the nucleus. NE-associated LINC complexes are one such pathway. Using CRISPR to disrupt the Nesprin-1 KASH domain, we identified this LINC complex protein as the predominant nuclear envelope anchor for microtubule cytoskeleton components, including nucleation activities and motor complexes, in mouse cardiomyocytes. Loss of Nesprin-1 LINC complexes resulted in loss of microtubule cytoskeleton proteins at the nucleus and changes in nuclear morphology and positioning in striated muscle cells, but with no overt physiological defects. Disrupting the KASH domain of Nesprin-1 suppresses Lmna-linked cardiac pathology, likely by reducing microtubule cytoskeleton activities at the nucleus. Nesprin-1 LINC complexes thus represent a potential therapeutic target for striated muscle laminopathies.
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