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Mitotic phosphorylation of SUN1 loosens its connection with the nuclear lamina while the LINC complex remains intact.

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posted on 2015-02-04, 13:54 authored by Jennifer T. Patel, Andrew Bottrill, Suzanna L. Prosser, Sangeetha Jayaraman, Kees Straatman, Andrew M. Fry, Sue Shackleton
At the onset mitosis in higher eukaryotes, the nuclear envelope (NE) undergoes dramatic deconstruction to allow separation of duplicated chromosomes. Studies have shown that during this process of nuclear envelope breakdown (NEBD), the extensive protein networks of the nuclear lamina are disassembled through phosphorylation of lamins and several inner nuclear membrane (INM) proteins. The LINC complex, composed of SUN and nesprin proteins, is involved in multiple interactions at the NE and plays vital roles in nuclear and cellular mechanics by connecting the nucleus to the cytoskeleton. Here, we show that SUN1, located in the INM, undergoes mitosis-specific phosphorylation on at least 3 sites within its nucleoplasmic N-terminus. We further identify Cdk1 as the kinase responsible for serine 48 and 333 phosphorylation, while serine 138 is phosphorylated by Plk1. In mitotic cells, SUN1 loses its interaction with N-terminal domain binding partners lamin A/C, emerin, and short nesprin-2 isoforms. Furthermore, a triple phosphomimetic SUN1 mutant displays increased solubility and reduced retention at the NE. In contrast, the central LINC complex interaction between the SUN1 C-terminus and the KASH domain of nesprin-2 is maintained during mitosis. Together, these data support a model whereby mitotic phosphorylation of SUN1 disrupts interactions with nucleoplasmic binding partners, promoting disassembly of the nuclear lamina and, potentially, its chromatin interactions. At the same time, our data add to an emerging picture that the core LINC complex plays an active role in NEBD.

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Citation

Jennifer T Patel, Andrew Bottrill, Suzanna L Prosser, Sangeetha Jayaraman, Kees Straatman, Andrew M Fry & Sue Shackleton (2014) Mitotic phosphorylation of SUN1 loosens its connection with the nuclear lamina while the LINC complex remains intact, Nucleus, 5:5, 462-473

Author affiliation

/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/School of Biological Sciences/Department of Biochemistry

Version

  • AM (Accepted Manuscript)

Published in

Jennifer T Patel

Publisher

Taylor & Francis, Landes Bioscience

issn

1949-1034

eissn

1949-1042

Copyright date

2014

Available date

2015-08-26

Publisher version

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.4161/nucl.36232

Notes

PMCID: PMC4164488

Language

en

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