4.1 Article

Prelamin A processing, accumulation and distribution in normal cells and laminopathy disorders

Journal

NUCLEUS
Volume 7, Issue 1, Pages 84-102

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/19491034.2016.1150397

Keywords

intracellular flow cytometry (IFC); lamin A; monoclonal antibody; nuclear envelope; prelamin A; post-translational processing; progeriod syndromes; ZMPSTE24

Categories

Funding

  1. NIH [R01 HL65440, R37 DK44746]
  2. DGAPA-PAPIIT
  3. UNAM [IN209403, IN203811, IN201114]
  4. CONACyT [42653-Q, 128464, 220503, CVU254079]
  5. Direccion General de Estudios de Posgrado-Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico
  6. Fred Hutchinson Interdisciplinary Dual Mentor Fellowship

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Lamin A is part of a complex structural meshwork located beneath the nuclear envelope and is involved in both structural support and the regulation of gene expression. Lamin A is initially expressed as prelamin A, which contains an extended carboxyl terminus that undergoes a series of post-translational modifications and subsequent cleavage by the endopeptidase ZMPSTE24 to generate lamin A. To facilitate investigations of the role of this cleavage in normal and disease states, we developed a monoclonal antibody (PL-1C7) that specifically recognizes prelamin A at the intact ZMPSTE24 cleavage site, ensuring prelamin A detection exclusively. Importantly, PL-1C7 can be used to determine prelamin A localization and accumulation in cells where lamin A is highly expressed without the use of exogenous fusion proteins. Our results show that unlike mature lamin A, prelamin A accumulates as discrete and localized foci at the nuclear periphery. Furthermore, whereas treatment with farnesylation inhibitors of cells overexpressing a GFP-prelamin A fusion protein results in the formation of large nucleoplasmic clumps, these aggregates are not observed upon similar treatment of cells expressing endogenous prelamin A or in cells lacking ZMPSTE24 expression and/or activity. Finally, we show that specific laminopathy-associated mutations exhibit both positive and negative effects on prelamin A accumulation, indicating that these mutations affect prelamin A processing efficiency in different manners.

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