Nuclear constriction segregates mobile nuclear proteins away from chromatin

Author:

Irianto Jerome12,Pfeifer Charlotte R.123,Bennett Rachel R.13,Xia Yuntao12,Ivanovska Irena L.12,Liu Andrea J.13,Greenberg Roger A.14,Discher Dennis E.123

Affiliation:

1. Physical Sciences Oncology Center at Penn, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104

2. Molecular and Cell Biophysics Lab, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104

3. Graduate Group/Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104

4. Cancer Biology, Abramson Family Cancer Research Institute, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104

Abstract

As a cell squeezes its nucleus through adjacent tissue, penetrates a basement membrane, or enters a small blood capillary, chromatin density and nuclear factors could in principle be physically perturbed. Here, in cancer cell migration through rigid micropores and in passive pulling into micropipettes, local compaction of chromatin is observed coincident with depletion of mobile factors. Heterochromatin/euchromatin was previously estimated from molecular mobility measurements to occupy a volume fraction f of roughly two-thirds of the nuclear volume, but based on the relative intensity of DNA and histones in several cancer cell lines drawn into narrow constrictions, f can easily increase locally to nearly 100%. By contrast, mobile proteins in the nucleus, including a dozen that function as DNA repair proteins (e.g., BRCA1, 53BP1) or nucleases (e.g., Cas9, FokI), are depleted within the constriction, approaching 0%. Such losses—compounded by the occasional rupture of the nuclear envelope—can have important functional consequences. Studies of a nuclease that targets a locus in chromosome-1 indeed show that constricted migration delays DNA damage.

Publisher

American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB)

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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