Many nuclear proteins form lamin-dependent complexes, including LEM-domain proteins, nesprins and SUN-domain proteins. These complexes have roles in chromatin organization, gene regulation and signal transduction. Some link the nucleoskeleton to cytoskeletal structures, ensuring that the nucleus and centrosome assume appropriate intracellular positions. These complexes provide new insights into cell architecture, as well as a foundation for the understanding of the molecular mechanisms that underlie the human laminopathies - clinical disorders that range from Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy to the accelerated ageing seen in Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome.
gation, chromatin decondensation, and mitotic progression as early as the two-cell stage, and embryos died at the Ϸ100-cell stage. Nuclear pores reassembled, whereas Ce-lamin, Ce-emerin, and Ce-MAN1 bound chromatin but remained patchy and disorganized. The nuclear membranes formed but failed to enclose anaphase-bridged chromatin. Time-lapse imaging showed two phenotypes: anaphase-bridged chromatin that eventually resolved, and segregated chromatin that returned to the midzone. Thus, the assembly of BAF, lamins, and LEM-domain proteins is mutually dependent, and is required to capture segregated chromosomes within the nascent nuclear envelope. Embryos that escaped lethality by down-regulation of Ce-BAF grew into sterile adults with misplaced distal tip cells and gonads, further suggesting that mild postembryonic reductions in BAF disrupt tissuespecific functions.nuclear assembly ͉ emerin ͉ LEM domain ͉ distal tip cell ͉ nuclear organization
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