scholarly journals The Role of the Nuclear Matrix and Cytoskeleton in Cancer

2003 ◽  
pp. 193-206
Author(s):  
Robert H. Getzenberg
Keyword(s):  
1994 ◽  
Vol 107 (10) ◽  
pp. 2851-2859
Author(s):  
E.C. Joly ◽  
E. Tremblay ◽  
R.M. Tanguay ◽  
Y. Wu ◽  
V. Bibor-Hardy

We have recently reported the cloning of a novel protein, TRiC-P5, with significant homology with protein 1 of the t-complex (TCP1). In the present study, the cellular localization of TRiC-P5 in Raji cells has been determined using an antiserum raised against a 18.5 kDa fusion protein. Results from cell fractionation and immunoblot studies indicate that TRiC-P5 is mainly localized in the cytoplasm. In addition, a significant part of TRiC-P5 is also found in the nucleus where it is attached to the nuclear matrix, a complex filament network involved in essential cellular functions such as DNA replication, and RNA transcription and maturation. Immunofluorescence experiments using the anti-TRiC-P5 antibodies confirm these results. We also provide evidence that, in the cytoplasm, TRiC-P5 is part of a large protein complex, most probably the TCP1-ring complex (TRiC), a hetero-oligomeric ring complex that plays a role of molecular chaperone in the folding of actin and tubulin.


1989 ◽  
Vol 67 (7) ◽  
pp. 345-351 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marianna Sikorska ◽  
Ian de Belle ◽  
James F. Whitfield ◽  
P. Roy Walker

Digestion of nuclei from normal or partially hepatectomised rat livers with endogenous nucleases liberated a pool of cryptic DNA polymerase-α activity which had previously gone unrecognised. Most of this activity is released into the supernatant as free enzyme molecules (11S), but a small fraction of it is released as a complex of 16S (probably with DNA primase). About 40% of the enzyme remains in the pellet, which contains undigested chromatin and components of the residual nuclear matrix and nucleoskeletal structures. Virtually all of this remaining activity is extracted by 2.0 M salt. The activity of DNA polymerase-α increases equally in all nuclear fractions during the period of DNA replication in regenerating rat liver. Lowering of the serum calcium level by thyroparathyroidectomy does not affect basal DNA polymerase-α activity, but prevents induction of the enzyme during the later stages of prereplicative development. However, an injection of 1α,25-dihydroxy vitamin D3 into the rat during the first 6 h after partial hepatectomy restores the ability of the hepatocytes to induce DNA polymerase-α activity and initiate DNA synthesis. These results are discussed in terms of the role of calcium ions in the regulation of the critical stage of prereplicative development which commits the cells to DNA replication.Key words: replication, nuclear, matrix, complex, lamina, reductase.


2000 ◽  
Vol 20 (20) ◽  
pp. 7764-7772 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sonu Dhar ◽  
Jeremy A. Squire ◽  
M. Prakash Hande ◽  
Raymund J. Wellinger ◽  
Tej K. Pandita

ABSTRACT Telomeres are complexes of repetitive DNA sequences and proteins constituting the ends of linear eukaryotic chromosomes. While these structures are thought to be associated with the nuclear matrix, they appear to be released from this matrix at the time when the cells exit from G2 and enter M phase. Checkpoints maintain the order and fidelity of the eukaryotic cell cycle, and defects in checkpoints contribute to genetic instability and cancer. The 14-3-3ς gene has been reported to be a checkpoint control gene, since it promotes G2 arrest following DNA damage. Here we demonstrate that inactivation of this gene influences genome integrity and cell survival. Analyses of chromosomes at metaphase showed frequent losses of telomeric repeat sequences, enhanced frequencies of chromosome end-to-end associations, and terminal nonreciprocal translocations in 14-3-3ς−/− cells. These phenotypes correlated with a reduction in the amount of G-strand overhangs at the telomeres and an altered nuclear matrix association of telomeres in these cells. Since the p53-mediated G1 checkpoint is operative in these cells, the chromosomal aberrations observed occurred preferentially in G2 after irradiation with gamma rays, corroborating the role of the 14-3-3ς protein in G2/M progression. The results also indicate that even in untreated cycling cells, occasional chromosomal breaks or telomere-telomere fusions trigger a G2 checkpoint arrest followed by repair of these aberrant chromosome structures before entering M phase. Since 14-3-3ς−/− cells are defective in maintaining G2 arrest, they enter M phase without repair of the aberrant chromosome structures and undergo cell death during mitosis. Thus, our studies provide evidence for the correlation among a dysfunctional G2/M checkpoint control, genomic instability, and loss of telomeres in mammalian cells.


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