Expression Levels of Lamin A or C Are Critical to Nuclear Maturation, Functional Responses, and Gene Expression Profiles in Differentiating Mouse Neutrophils.
Klaudia SzymczakMargery G H PelletierKrishnakumar MaluAnna M BarbeauRichard M GiadoneSeda C BabroudiPeter C W GainesPublished in: ImmunoHorizons (2022)
Neutrophils mediate critical innate immune responses by migrating to sites of infection or inflammation, phagocytosing microorganisms, and releasing an arsenal of antimicrobial agents, including reactive oxygen species. These functions are shared by other innate immune cell types, but an interesting feature of neutrophils is their hallmark lobulated nuclei. Although why this bizarre nuclear shape forms is still being elucidated, studies of two intermediate filament proteins that associate with the nuclear envelope, lamin A and C, indicate that expression levels of these proteins govern nuclear maturation. These A-type lamins also modulate nuclear stiffness, the loss of which may be critical to the migration of not only neutrophils but also cancer cells that become prone to metastasis. We investigated whether increased expression of either lamin A or C affects neutrophil nuclear morphologic maturation, but more importantly we tested whether overexpression of either lamin also affects neutrophil functional responses, using two mouse myeloid progenitor models that can be induced toward functionally responsive neutrophil-like cells. Collectively, our results demonstrate that overexpression of either lamin A or C not only disrupts nuclear lobulation but also causes aberrant functional responses critical to innate immunity, including chemotaxis, phagocytosis, and reactive oxygen species production. Moreover, the lamin A-overexpressing cells exhibit decreased expression of a critical NADPH oxidase complex factor, gp91 phox , and transcriptomic profiling demonstrated differential expression of a number of myeloid differentiation and functional pathway components. Taken together, these data demonstrate that A-type lamin expression levels modulate not only nuclear morphologic features but also gene expression changes as neutrophils mature.
Keyphrases
- poor prognosis
- immune response
- reactive oxygen species
- gene expression
- cell proliferation
- binding protein
- bone marrow
- dendritic cells
- long non coding rna
- computed tomography
- single cell
- dna methylation
- magnetic resonance imaging
- genome wide
- cell death
- high resolution
- toll like receptor
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cancer therapy
- inflammatory response
- genome wide identification
- contrast enhanced
- drug induced
- cell fate
- neural network