Nuclear Titin interacts with A- and B-type lamins in vitro and in vivo
Open Access
- 15 January 2006
- journal article
- Published by The Company of Biologists in Journal of Cell Science
- Vol. 119 (2), 239-249
- https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.02728
Abstract
Lamins form structural filaments in the nucleus. Mutations in A-type lamins cause muscular dystrophy, cardiomyopathy and other diseases, including progeroid syndromes. To identify new binding partners for lamin A, we carried out a two-hybrid screen with a human skeletal-muscle cDNA library, using the Ig-fold domain of lamin A as bait. The C-terminal region of titin was recovered twice. Previous investigators showed that nuclear isoforms of titin are essential for chromosome condensation during mitosis. Our titin fragment, which includes two regions unique to titin (M-is6 and M-is7), bound directly to both A- and B-type lamins in vitro. Titin binding to disease-causing lamin A mutants R527P and R482Q was reduced 50%. Studies in living cells suggested lamin-titin interactions were physiologically relevant. In Caenorhabditis elegans embryos, two independent C. elegans (Ce)-titin antibodies colocalized with Ce-lamin at the nuclear envelope. In lamin-downregulated [lmn-1(RNAi)] embryos, Ce-titin was undetectable at the nuclear envelope suggesting its localization or stability requires Ce-lamin. In human cells (HeLa), antibodies against the titin-specific domain M-is6 gave both diffuse and punctate intranuclear staining by indirect immunofluorescence, and recognized at least three bands larger than 1 MDa in immunoblots of isolated HeLa nuclei. In HeLa cells that transiently overexpressed a lamin-binding fragment of titin, nuclei became grossly misshapen and herniated at sites lacking lamin B. We conclude that the C-terminus of nuclear titin binds lamins in vivo and might contribute to nuclear organization during interphase.Keywords
This publication has 60 references indexed in Scilit:
- The nuclear lamina comes of ageNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2005
- Three New Isoforms of Caenorhabditis elegans UNC-89 Containing MLCK-like Protein Kinase DomainsJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- The role of titin in muscular disordersAnnals of Medicine, 2003
- Nesprin‐1α self‐associates and binds directly to emerin and lamin A in vitroFEBS Letters, 2002
- Structure of the Globular Tail of Nuclear LaminJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2002
- Alteration of nuclear lamin organization inhibits RNA polymerase II–dependent transcriptionThe Journal of cell biology, 2002
- Modularity and homology: modelling of the titin type I modules and their interfacesJournal of Molecular Biology, 2001
- Mistargeting of B-Type Lamins at the End of MitosisThe Journal of cell biology, 2001
- LMNA, encoding lamin A/C, is mutated in partial lipodystrophyNature Genetics, 2000
- Structural Organization of the Human Gene (LMNB1) Encoding Nuclear Lamin B1Genomics, 1995