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      Mechanisms of allelic and clinical heterogeneity of lamin A/C phenotypes

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          Abstract

          Mutations in the lamin A/C ( LMNA) gene cause a broad range of clinical syndromes that show tissue-restricted abnormalities of post mitotic tissues, such as muscle, nerve, heart, and adipose tissue. Mutations in other nuclear envelope proteins cause clinically overlapping disorders. The majority of mutations are dominant single amino acid changes (toxic protein produced by the single mutant gene), and patients are heterozygous with both normal and abnormal proteins. Experimental support has been provided for different models of cellular pathogenesis in nuclear envelope diseases, including changes in heterochromatin formation at the nuclear membrane (epigenomics), changes in the timing of steps during terminal differentiation of cells, and structural abnormalities of the nuclear membrane. These models are not mutually exclusive and may be important in different cells at different times of development. Recent experiments using fusion proteins of normal and mutant lamin A/C proteins fused to a bacterial adenine methyltransferase (DamID) provided compelling evidence of mutation-specific perturbation of epigenomic imprinting during terminal differentiation. These gain-of-function properties include lineage-specific ineffective genomic silencing during exit from the cell cycle (heterochromatinization), as well as promiscuous initiation of silencing at incorrect places in the genome. To date, these findings have been limited to a few muscular dystrophy and lipodystrophy LMNA mutations but seem shared with a distinct nuclear envelope disease, emerin-deficient muscular dystrophy. The dominant-negative structural model and gain-of-function epigenomic models for distinct LMNA mutations are not mutually exclusive, and it is likely that both models contribute to aspects of the many complex clinical phenotypes observed.

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          Transcriptional repression mediated by repositioning of genes to the nuclear lamina.

          Nuclear compartmentalization seems to have an important role in regulating metazoan genes. Although studies on immunoglobulin and other loci have shown a correlation between positioning at the nuclear lamina and gene repression, the functional consequences of this compartmentalization remain untested. We devised an approach for inducible tethering of genes to the inner nuclear membrane (INM), and tested the consequences of such repositioning on gene activity in mouse fibroblasts. Here, using three-dimensional DNA-immunoFISH, we demonstrate repositioning of chromosomal regions to the nuclear lamina that is dependent on breakdown and reformation of the nuclear envelope during mitosis. Moreover, tethering leads to the accumulation of lamin and INM proteins, but not to association with pericentromeric heterochromatin or nuclear pore complexes. Recruitment of genes to the INM can result in their transcriptional repression. Finally, we use targeted adenine methylation (DamID) to show that, as is the case for our model system, inactive immunoglobulin loci at the nuclear periphery are contacted by INM and lamina proteins. We propose that these molecular interactions may be used to compartmentalize and to limit the accessibility of immunoglobulin loci to transcription and recombination factors.
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            Chromatin in pluripotent embryonic stem cells and differentiation.

            Embryonic stem (ES) cells are unique in that they are pluripotent and have the ability to self-renew. The molecular mechanisms that underlie these two fundamental properties are largely unknown. We discuss how unique properties of chromatin in ES cells contribute to the maintenance of pluripotency and the determination of differentiation properties.
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              When lamins go bad: nuclear structure and disease.

              Mutations in nuclear lamins or other proteins of the nuclear envelope are the root cause of a group of phenotypically diverse genetic disorders known as laminopathies, which have symptoms that range from muscular dystrophy to neuropathy to premature aging syndromes. Although precise disease mechanisms remain unclear, there has been substantial progress in our understanding of not only laminopathies, but also the biological roles of nuclear structure. Nuclear envelope dysfunction is associated with altered nuclear activity, impaired structural dynamics, and aberrant cell signaling. Building on these findings, small molecules are being discovered that may become effective therapeutic agents. Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Physiol Genomics
                Physiol. Genomics
                physiolgenomics
                Physiol Genomics
                PHYSIOLGENOMICS
                Physiological Genomics
                American Physiological Society (Bethesda, MD )
                1094-8341
                1531-2267
                1 September 2018
                11 May 2018
                11 May 2018
                : 50
                : 9
                : 694-704
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Laboratory of Muscle Stem Cells and Gene Regulation, National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal, and Skin Diseases, National Institutes of Health , Bethesda, Maryland
                [2] 2School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Binghamton University, State University of New York , Binghamton New York
                Author notes
                Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: E. P. Hoffman, School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Binghamton Univ., State University of New York (SUNY), PO Box 6000, Binghamton NY, 13902 (e-mail: ehoffman@ 123456binghamton.edu ).
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2348-2332
                Article
                PG-00128-2017 PG-00128-2017
                10.1152/physiolgenomics.00128.2017
                6335092
                29750601
                e72c2c9b-48f2-4b3b-aebd-c10fe9ee074c
                Copyright © 2018 the American Physiological Society

                Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution CC-BY 4.0: © the American Physiological Society.

                History
                Categories
                Review
                -Omic Approaches to Understanding Muscle Biology
                Custom metadata
                True

                Genetics
                chromatin remodeling,epigenetics,laminopathies,muscle disease
                Genetics
                chromatin remodeling, epigenetics, laminopathies, muscle disease

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