[HTML][HTML] Emerin caps the pointed end of actin filaments: evidence for an actin cortical network at the nuclear inner membrane

JM Holaska, AK Kowalski, KL Wilson - PLoS biology, 2004 - journals.plos.org
JM Holaska, AK Kowalski, KL Wilson
PLoS biology, 2004journals.plos.org
X-linked Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy is caused by loss of emerin, a LEM-domain
protein of the nuclear inner membrane. To better understand emerin function, we used
affinity chromatography to purify emerin-binding proteins from nuclear extracts of HeLa cells.
Complexes that included actin, αII-spectrin and additional proteins, bound specifically to
emerin. Actin polymerization assays in the presence or absence of gelsolin or capping
protein showed that emerin binds and stabilizes the pointed end of actin filaments …
X-linked Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy is caused by loss of emerin, a LEM-domain protein of the nuclear inner membrane. To better understand emerin function, we used affinity chromatography to purify emerin-binding proteins from nuclear extracts of HeLa cells. Complexes that included actin, αII-spectrin and additional proteins, bound specifically to emerin. Actin polymerization assays in the presence or absence of gelsolin or capping protein showed that emerin binds and stabilizes the pointed end of actin filaments, increasing the actin polymerization rate 4- to 12-fold. We propose that emerin contributes to the formation of an actin-based cortical network at the nuclear inner membrane, conceptually analogous to the actin cortical network at the plasma membrane. Thus, in addition to disrupting transcription factors that bind emerin, loss of emerin may destabilize nuclear envelope architecture by weakening a nuclear actin network.
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