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The Nuclear Lamina

Authors :
Karen L. Reddy
Ashley J. Melendez-Perez
Xianrong Wong
Source :
Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology. 14(2)
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Lamins interact with a host of nuclear membrane proteins, transcription factors, chromatin regulators, signaling molecules, splicing factors, and even chromatin itself to form a nuclear subcompartment, the nuclear lamina, that is involved in a variety of cellular processes such as the governance of nuclear integrity, nuclear positioning, mitosis, DNA repair, DNA replication, splicing, signaling, mechanotransduction and -sensation, transcriptional regulation, and genome organization. Lamins are the primary scaffold for this nuclear subcompartment, but interactions with lamin-associated peptides in the inner nuclear membrane are self-reinforcing and mutually required. Lamins also interact, directly and indirectly, with peripheral heterochromatin domains called lamina-associated domains (LADs) and help to regulate dynamic 3D genome organization and expression of developmentally regulated genes.

Details

ISSN :
19430264
Volume :
14
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cold Spring Harbor perspectives in biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c30177ea3f663da5e5dd8644ee0dd143