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Choreography of lamina‐associated domains: structure meets dynamics

Nicholas S. Alagna, Tiera I. Thomas, Katherine L. Wilson, Karen Reddy

2023FEBS Letters31 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Lamina-associated domains are large regions of heterochromatin positioned at the nuclear periphery. These domains have been implicated in gene repression, especially in the context of development. In mammals, LAD organization is dependent on nuclear lamins, inner nuclear membrane proteins, and chromatin state. In addition, chromatin readers and modifier proteins have been implicated in this organization, potentially serving as molecular tethers that interact with both nuclear envelope proteins and chromatin. More recent studies have focused on teasing apart the rules that govern dynamic LAD organization and how LAD organization, in turn, relates to gene regulation and overall 3D genome organization. This review highlights recent studies in mammalian cells uncovering factors that instruct the choreography of LAD organization, re-organization, and dynamics at the nuclear lamina, including LAD dynamics in interphase and through mitotic exit, when LAD organization is re-established, as well as intra-LAD subdomain variations.

Topics & Concepts

Nuclear laminaChromatinLaminInner membraneBiologyContext (archaeology)HeterochromatinGenomic organizationCell biologyChoreographyMitosisInterphaseNuclear poreNuclear proteinGeneGenomeGeneticsDanceTranscription factorNucleusArtLiteratureMitochondrionPaleontologyNuclear Structure and FunctionGenomics and Chromatin DynamicsRNA Research and Splicing
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