Laminopathies

JLV Broers, CJ Hutchison… - The Journal of …, 2004 - Wiley Online Library
JLV Broers, CJ Hutchison, FCS Ramaekers
The Journal of Pathology: A Journal of the Pathological Society of …, 2004Wiley Online Library
Nuclear lamins form a fibrous nucleoskeletal network of intermediate‐sized filaments that
underlies the inner nuclear membrane. It associates with this membrane through
interactions with specific integral nuclear membrane proteins, while within this flattened
lamin lattice the nuclear pore complexes are embedded. Next to this peripheral network, the
lamins can form intranuclear structures. The lamins are the evolutionary progenitors of the
cytoplasmic intermediate filament proteins and have profound influences on nuclear …
Abstract
Nuclear lamins form a fibrous nucleoskeletal network of intermediate‐sized filaments that underlies the inner nuclear membrane. It associates with this membrane through interactions with specific integral nuclear membrane proteins, while within this flattened lamin lattice the nuclear pore complexes are embedded. Next to this peripheral network, the lamins can form intranuclear structures. The lamins are the evolutionary progenitors of the cytoplasmic intermediate filament proteins and have profound influences on nuclear structure and function. These influences require that lamins have dynamic properties and dual identities as structural building blocks on the one hand, and transcription regulators on the other. Which of these identities underlies the laminopathies, a myriad of genetic diseases caused by mutations in lamins or lamin‐associated proteins, is a topic of intense debate. Copyright © 2004 Pathological Society of Great Britain and Ireland. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.
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