scholarly journals KMT1/Suv39 methyltransferase family regulates peripheral heterochromatin tethering via histone and non-histone protein methylations

2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Radhika Arasala Rao ◽  
Alhad Ashok Ketkar ◽  
Neelam Kedia ◽  
Vignesh K Krishnamoorthy ◽  
Vairavan Lakshmanan ◽  
...  

AbstractEuchromatic histone methyltransferases (EHMTs), members of the KMT1 family, methylate histone and non-histone proteins. Here we uncover a novel role for EHMTs in regulating heterochromatin anchorage to the nuclear periphery (NP) via non-histone (LaminB1) methylations. We show that EHMTs methylates and stabilizes LaminB1 (LMNB1), which associates with the H3K9me2-marked peripheral heterochromatin. Loss of LMNB1 methylation or EHMTs abrogates the heterochromatin anchorage from the NP. We further demonstrate that the loss of EHMTs induces many hallmarks of aging including global reduction of H3K27methyl marks along with altered nuclear-morphology. Consistent with this, we observed a gradual depletion of EHMTs, which correlates with loss of methylated LMNB1 and peripheral heterochromatin in aging human fibroblasts. Restoration of EHMT expression reverts peripheral heterochromatin defect in aged cells. Collectively our work elucidates a new mechanism by which EHMTs regulate heterochromatin domain organization and reveals their impact on fundamental changes associated with the intrinsic aging process.

2002 ◽  
Vol 83 (5) ◽  
pp. 1005-1012 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Dal Monte ◽  
S. Pignatelli ◽  
N. Zini ◽  
N. M. Maraldi ◽  
E. Perret ◽  
...  

Human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) UL53 belongs to a family of conserved herpesvirus genes. In this work, the expression and localization of the UL53 gene product was analysed. Results obtained showed that pUL53 is a new structural protein. In infected human fibroblasts, pUL53 localizes in cytoplasmic perinuclear granular formations together with other structural viral proteins. In the nucleus, pUL53 forms patches at the nuclear periphery and co-localizes with lamin B at the internal nuclear membrane level. Immunoelectron microscopy studies have disclosed that nuclear pseudo-inclusions are labelled, whereas nucleocapsid formations within the intranuclear skein are negative. Furthermore, the mature virus particle maintains pUL53 at its tegumental level. These data suggest that pUL53 could be involved either in nucleocapsid maturation or in the egress of nucleocapsids from the nucleus to the cytoplasm through the nuclear membrane, a role compatible with the function hypothesized for UL31, its positional homologue in herpes simplex virus type 1.


eLife ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrey Poleshko ◽  
Cheryl L Smith ◽  
Son C Nguyen ◽  
Priya Sivaramakrishnan ◽  
Karen G Wong ◽  
...  

Cell-type-specific 3D organization of the genome is unrecognizable during mitosis. It remains unclear how essential positional information is transmitted through cell division such that a daughter cell recapitulates the spatial genome organization of the parent. Lamina-associated domains (LADs) are regions of repressive heterochromatin positioned at the nuclear periphery that vary by cell type and contribute to cell-specific gene expression and identity. Here we show that histone 3 lysine 9 dimethylation (H3K9me2) is an evolutionarily conserved, specific mark of nuclear peripheral heterochromatin and that it is retained through mitosis. During mitosis, phosphorylation of histone 3 serine 10 temporarily shields the H3K9me2 mark allowing for dissociation of chromatin from the nuclear lamina. Using high-resolution 3D immuno-oligoFISH, we demonstrate that H3K9me2-enriched genomic regions, which are positioned at the nuclear lamina in interphase cells prior to mitosis, re-associate with the forming nuclear lamina before mitotic exit. The H3K9me2 modification of peripheral heterochromatin ensures that positional information is safeguarded through cell division such that individual LADs are re-established at the nuclear periphery in daughter nuclei. Thus, H3K9me2 acts as a 3D architectural mitotic guidepost. Our data establish a mechanism for epigenetic memory and inheritance of spatial organization of the genome.


1997 ◽  
Vol 8 (12) ◽  
pp. 2407-2419 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shin-ichiro Imai ◽  
Seiji Nishibayashi ◽  
Koji Takao ◽  
Masayuki Tomifuji ◽  
Tadahiro Fujino ◽  
...  

The cellular aging-associated transcriptional repressor that we previously named as Orpheus was identical to Oct-1, a member of the POU domain family. Oct-1 represses the collagenase gene, one of the cellular aging-associated genes, by interacting with an AT-richcis-element in the upstream of the gene in preimmortalized cells at earlier population-doubling levels and in immortalized cells. In these stages of cells, considerable fractions of the Oct-1 protein were prominently localized in the nuclear periphery and colocalized with lamin B. During the cellular aging process, however, this subspecies of Oct-1 disappeared from the nuclear periphery. The cells lacking the nuclear peripheral Oct-1 protein exhibited strong collagenase expression and carried typical senescent morphologies. Concomitantly, the binding activity and the amount of nuclear Oct-1 protein were reduced in the aging process and resumed after immortalization. However, the whole cellular amounts of Oct-1 protein were not significantly changed during either process. Thus, the cellular aging-associated genes including the collagenase gene seemed to be derepressed by the dissociation of Oct-1 protein from the nuclear peripheral structure. Oct-1 may form a transcriptional repressive apparatus by anchoring nuclear matrix attachment regions onto the nuclear lamina in the nuclear periphery.


Blood ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 120 (21) ◽  
pp. 112-112
Author(s):  
John Rasko ◽  
Justin Wong ◽  
William Ritchie ◽  
Ebner Olivia ◽  
Selbach Matthias ◽  
...  

Abstract Abstract 112 Alternative splicing of RNA is a fundamental biological process that affects almost all multi-exonic genes to promote protein diversity. Of the 3 modes of RNA splicing that also include exon skipping and alternative splice site usage, intron retention (IR) is the least abundant and least understood. Despite isolated instances of IR-associated biological function, IR has been widely regarded as a failure in the splicing machinery to excise intronic sequences from pre-messenger RNAs. Since an overall role for IR is unknown, we systematically examined the impact of IR in normal primary myeloid cells during differentiation. Using messenger RNA sequencing (mRNA-seq) and a novel algorithm we termed IRFinder, we determined intron-retaining genes that were differentially regulated in FACS-purified cells at three progressive stages of mouse granulopoiesis; CD34+Kit+Gr-1low promyelocytes, CD34−Kit−Gr-1mid myelocytes and CD34−Kit−Gr-1high granulocytes. We demonstrated that IR exhibits a specific pattern of dynamic regulation in 86 genes during granulocytic differentiation. Figure 1, intron retaining transcripts were predominantly accumulated during differentiation, with low levels in promyelocytes, increasing through myelocytes to the highest levels in granulocytes. These genes include those with functions specific to granulocytes (Lyz2 and MMP8) and those governing the nuclear architecture (Lmnb1, Lmnb2, Lbr and Npm1), consistent with the unique change of nuclear morphology from promyelocytes to granulocytes. Figure 2, IR was significantly associated with nuclear localisation and functions involving the nuclear periphery. Subsequent mRNA-seq and IRFinder analysis of FACS purified human granulocytes displayed significant overlap of intron retaining genes between human and mouse (71/86 genes, P=2.85E-22, hypergeometric test), showing that IR is conserved between these two species. Inhibition of nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) in primary granulocytes using caffeine coupled with actinomycin D resulted in marked accumulation of 39/86 intron retaining transcripts (P<0.05, RUV procedure with Holm-Bonferroni correction), indicating that intron retaining transcripts are subjected to degradation by NMD. Mass spectometry analysis detected proteins encoded by 21 NMD-regulated intron-retaining genes. There was a strong negative correlation of protein expression with levels of IR (P=0.0015, binomial test). In mouse bone marrow reconstitution experiments, we showed that enforced re-expression of the Lmnb1 gene, which displayed the highest levels of endogenous IR led to decreased granulocyte cell count, increased nuclear volume by 30% and altered nuclear morphology. We conclude that IR coupled with NMD is a conserved physiological mechanism that may provide an energetically favourable level of gene expression control during granulopoiesis. Our findings establish a foundation to examine the role of IR- coupled NMD in normal haemopoiesis as well as in hemopoietic diseases now known to be affected by mutations of splicing factors. Figure 1,. intron retaining transcripts were predominantly accumulated during differentiation, with low levels in promyelocytes, increasing through myelocytes to the highest levels in granulocytes. These genes include those with functions specific to granulocytes (Lyz2 and MMP8) and those governing the nuclear architecture (Lmnb1, Lmnb2, Lbr and Npm1), consistent with the unique change of nuclear morphology from promyelocytes to granulocytes. Figure 2, IR was significantly associated with nuclear localisation and functions involving the nuclear periphery. Subsequent mRNA-seq and IRFinder analysis of FACS purified human granulocytes displayed significant overlap of intron retaining genes between human and mouse (71/86 genes, P=2.85E-22, hypergeometric test), showing that IR is conserved between these two species. Inhibition of nonsense-mediated decay (NMD) in primary granulocytes using caffeine coupled with actinomycin D resulted in marked accumulation of 39/86 intron retaining transcripts (P<0.05, RUV procedure with Holm-Bonferroni correction), indicating that intron retaining transcripts are subjected to degradation by NMD. Mass spectometry analysis detected proteins encoded by 21 NMD-regulated intron-retaining genes. There was a strong negative correlation of protein expression with levels of IR (P=0.0015, binomial test). In mouse bone marrow reconstitution experiments, we showed that enforced re-expression of the Lmnb1 gene, which displayed the highest levels of endogenous IR led to decreased granulocyte cell count, increased nuclear volume by 30% and altered nuclear morphology. We conclude that IR coupled with NMD is a conserved physiological mechanism that may provide an energetically favourable level of gene expression control during granulopoiesis. Our findings establish a foundation to examine the role of IR- coupled NMD in normal haemopoiesis as well as in hemopoietic diseases now known to be affected by mutations of splicing factors. Disclosures: Rasko: Genea Ltd: Employment; Rarecyte: Consultancy.


2013 ◽  
Vol 203 (5) ◽  
pp. 767-783 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qian Bian ◽  
Nimish Khanna ◽  
Jurgis Alvikas ◽  
Andrew S. Belmont

Increasing evidence points to nuclear compartmentalization as a contributing mechanism for gene regulation, yet mechanisms for compartmentalization remain unclear. In this paper, we use autonomous targeting of bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) transgenes to reveal cis requirements for peripheral targeting. Three peripheral targeting regions (PTRs) within an HBB BAC bias a competition between pericentric versus peripheral heterochromatin targeting toward the nuclear periphery, which correlates with increased H3K9me3 across the β-globin gene cluster and locus control region. Targeting to both heterochromatin compartments is dependent on Suv39H-mediated H3K9me3 methylation. In different chromosomal contexts, PTRs confer no targeting, targeting to pericentric heterochromatin, or targeting to the periphery. A combination of fluorescent in situ hybridization, BAC transgenesis, and knockdown experiments reveals that peripheral tethering of the endogenous HBB locus depends both on Suv39H-mediated H3K9me3 methylation over hundreds of kilobases surrounding HBB and on G9a-mediated H3K9me2 methylation over flanking sequences in an adjacent lamin-associated domain. Our results demonstrate that multiple cis-elements regulate the overall balance of specific epigenetic marks and peripheral gene targeting.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrey Poleshko ◽  
Cheryl L. Smith ◽  
Son C. Nguyen ◽  
Priya Sivaramakrishnan ◽  
John Isaac Murray ◽  
...  

AbstractCell-type-specific 3D organization of the genome is unrecognizable during mitosis. It remains unclear how essential positional information is transmitted through cell division such that a daughter cell recapitulates the spatial genome organization of the parent. Lamina-associated domains (LADs) are regions of repressive heterochromatin positioned at the nuclear periphery that vary by cell type and contribute to cell-specific gene expression and identity. Here we show that histone 3 lysine 9 dimethylation (H3K9me2) is an evolutionarily conserved, specific mark of nuclear peripheral heterochromatin and that it is retained through mitosis. During mitosis, phosphorylation of histone 3 serine 10 temporarily shields the H3K9me2 mark allowing for dissociation of chromatin from the nuclear lamina. Using high-resolution 3D immuno-oligoFISH, we demonstrate that H3K9me2-enriched genomic regions, which are positioned at the nuclear lamina in interphase cells prior to mitosis, re-associate with the forming nuclear lamina before mitotic exit. The H3K9me2 modification of peripheral heterochromatin ensures that positional information is safeguarded through cell division such that individual LADs are re-established at the nuclear periphery in daughter nuclei. Thus, H3K9me2 acts as a 3D architectural mitotic guidepost. Our data establish a mechanism for epigenetic memory and inheritance of spatial organization of the genome.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrew McColloch ◽  
Manoochehr Rabiei ◽  
Parisa Rabbani ◽  
Alan Bowling ◽  
Michael Cho

Abstract Stem cells undergo drastic morphological alterations during differentiation. While extensive studies have been performed to examine the cytoskeletal remodeling, there is a growing interest to determine the morphological, structural and functional changes of the nucleus. The current study is therefore aimed at quantifying the extent of remodeling of the nuclear morphology of human mesenchymal stem cells during biochemically-induced adipogenic differentiation. Results show the size of nuclei decreased exponentially over time as the lipid accumulation is up-regulated. Increases in the lipid accumulation appear to lag the nuclear reorganization, suggesting the nuclear deformation is a prerequisite to adipocyte maturation. Furthermore, the lamin A/C expression was increased and redistributed to the nuclear periphery along with a subsequent increase in the nuclear aspect ratio. To further assess the role of the nucleus, a nuclear morphology with a high aspect ratio was achieved using microcontact-printed substrate. The cells with an elongated nuclear shape did not efficiently undergo adipogenesis, suggesting the cellular and nuclear processes associated with stem cell differentiation at the early stage of adipogenesis cause a change in the nuclear morphology and cannot be abrogated by the morphological cues. In addition, a novel computational biomechanical model was generated to simulate the nuclear shape change during differentiation and predict the forces acting upon the nucleus. This effort led to the development of computational scaling approach to simulate the experimentally observed adipogenic differentiation processes over 15 days in less than 1.5 hours.


2010 ◽  
Vol 84 (14) ◽  
pp. 7005-7017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas J. Buchkovich ◽  
Tobi G. Maguire ◽  
James C. Alwine

ABSTRACT The process of assembly and egress of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) virions requires significant morphological alterations of the nuclear and cytoplasmic architecture. In the studies presented we show that the nuclear periphery is dramatically altered, especially near the cytoplasmic assembly compartment, where the nuclear lamina is specifically rearranged, the outer nuclear membrane is altered, and the nucleus becomes permeable to large molecules. In addition, the tethering of the inner and outer nuclear membranes is lost during infection due to a decrease in levels of the SUN domain proteins. We previously demonstrated that the endoplasmic reticulum protein BiP functions as a component of the assembly compartment and disruption of BiP causes the loss of assembly compartment integrity. In this study we show that the depletion of BiP, and the loss of assembly compartment integrity, results in the loss of virally induced lamina rearrangement and morphology of the nucleus that is characteristic of HCMV infection. BiP functions in lamina rearrangement through its ability to affect lamin phosphorylation. Depletion of BiP and disruption of the assembly compartment result in the loss of lamin phosphorylation. The dependency of lamin phosphorylation on BiP correlates with an interaction between BiP and UL50. Finally, we confirm previous data (S. V. Indran, M. E. Ballestas, and W. J. Britt, J. Virol. 84:3162-3177, 2010) suggesting an involvement of dynein in assembly compartment formation and extend this observation by showing that when dynein is inhibited, the nuclear morphology characteristic of an HCMV infection is lost. Our data suggest a highly integrated assembly-egress continuum.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Quinn MacPherson ◽  
Andrew J. Spakowitz

ABSTRACTA layer of dense heterochromatin is found at the periphery of the nucleus. Because this peripheral heterochromatin functions as a repressive phase, mechanisms that relocate genes to the periphery play an important role in regulating transcription. Using Monte-Carlo simulations, we show that an interaction between chromatin and the nuclear boundary need not be specific to heterochromatin in order to preferentially locate heterochromatin to the nuclear periphery. This observation considerably broadens the class of possible interactions that result in peripheral positioning to include boundary interactions that either weakly attract all chromatin or strongly bind to a randomly chosen small subset of loci. The key distinguishing feature of heterochromatin is its high chromatin density with respect to euchromatin. In our model this densification is caused by HP1’s preferential binding to H3K9me3 marked histone tails. We conclude that factors that are themselves unrelated to the nuclear periphery can determine which genomic regions condense to form heterochromatin and thereby control which regions are relocated to the periphery.


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