4.6 Article

A-type nuclear lamins act as transcriptional repressors when targeted to promoters

Journal

EXPERIMENTAL CELL RESEARCH
Volume 315, Issue 6, Pages 996-1007

Publisher

ELSEVIER INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.yexcr.2009.01.003

Keywords

Lamin A/C; Laminopathies; Transcription repression

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01AG024287]

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Regions of heterochromatin are often found at the periphery of the mammalian nucleus, juxtaposed to the nuclear lamina. Genes in these regions are likely maintained in a transcriptionally silent state, although other locations at the nuclear periphery associated with nuclear pores are sites of active transcription. As primary components of the nuclear lamina, A- and B-type nuclear lamins are intermediate filament proteins that interact with DNA, histones and known transcriptional repressors, leading to speculation that they may promote establishment of repressive domains. However, no direct evidence of a role for nuclear lamins in transcriptional repression has been reported. Here we find that human lamin A, when expressed in yeast and cultured human cells as a fusion protein to the Gal4 DNA-binding domain (DBD), can mediate robust transcriptional repression of promoters with Gal4 binding sites. Full repression by lamin A requires both the coiled-coil rod domain and the C-terminal tail domain. In human cells, other intermediate filament proteins Such as lamin B and vimentin are unable to confer robust repression as Gal4-DBD fusions, indicating that this property is specific to A-type nuclear lamins. These findings indicate that A-type lamins can promote transcriptional repression when in proximity of a promoter. (C) 2009 Published by Elsevier Inc.

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