Litcius/Paper detail

Nuclear rupture in confined cell migration triggers nuclear actin polymerization to limit chromatin leakage

Christos Kamaras, Dennis Frank, Hong Wang, Friedel Drepper, Pitter F. Huesgen, Robert Grosse

2025The EMBO Journal7 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Upon cell migration in confined space, such as during cancer metastasis, mechanical forces from the extracellular matrix act onto the nucleus leading to nuclear envelope (NE) rupture, chromatin leakage and genomic instability. Here we found that during confined migration, NE rupture triggers dynamic nuclear F-actin formation dependent on the formins DIAPH1 and DIAPH3. We show that DIAPH3 dynamically and transiently relocates to the nucleus upon NE rupture. Interfering with DIAPH1/3 or with nuclear actin polymerization resulted in nuclear instability during confined migration. Notably, nuclear formin activity or actin assembly limit NE rupture-induced chromatin leakage. Similarly, silencing of Ataxia Telangiectasia and Rad3-related protein (ATR) reduced NE rupture-triggered nuclear F-actin assembly and increased chromatin leakage. Consistent with this, ATR promotes the phosphorylation of DIAPH3 at S1072 adjacent to its autoregulatory domain to promote nuclear actin polymerization. Using atomic force microscopy, we found that nuclear actin assembly or nuclear DIAPH3 activity promotes nuclear stiffness in an ATR-dependent manner. Thus, our study identifies an ATR-formin module that regulates nuclear mechanical properties through induction of intranuclear actin scaffolding.

Topics & Concepts

LaminChromatinNuclear laminaCell biologyCell nucleusBiologyActinNuclear transportForminsNuclear proteinNuclear matrixActin remodelingBiophysicsChromatin remodelingCytoskeletonNucleoporinCytochalasin DMicrofilamentMDia1Cell migrationNuclear poreSmall interfering RNANuclear export signalHistoneNuclear localization sequenceProfilinNuclear Structure and FunctionCellular Mechanics and InteractionsMicrotubule and mitosis dynamics