Department of Physiology, Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, D400 Richards Building, Philadelphia, PA 19104-6085, USA.
J Cell Sci. 2012 Sep 1;125(Pt 17):4158-69. doi: 10.1242/jcs.108688. Epub 2012 May 23.
Dynamic interactions with the cytoskeleton drive the movement and positioning of nuclei in many cell types. During muscle cell development, myoblasts fuse to form syncytial myofibers with nuclei positioned regularly along the length of the cell. Nuclear translocation in developing myotubes requires microtubules, but the mechanisms involved have not been elucidated. We find that as nuclei actively translocate through the cell, they rotate in three dimensions. The nuclear envelope, nucleoli and chromocenters within the nucleus rotate together as a unit. Both translocation and rotation require an intact microtubule cytoskeleton, which forms a dynamic bipolar network around nuclei. The plus- and minus-end-directed microtubule motor proteins, kinesin-1 and dynein, localize to the nuclear envelope in myotubes. Kinesin-1 localization is mediated at least in part by interaction with klarsicht/ANC-1/Syne homology (KASH) proteins. Depletion of kinesin-1 abolishes nuclear rotation and significantly inhibits nuclear translocation, resulting in the abnormal aggregation of nuclei at the midline of the myotube. Dynein depletion also inhibits nuclear dynamics, but to a lesser extent, leading to altered spacing between adjacent nuclei. Thus, oppositely directed motors acting from the surface of the nucleus drive nuclear motility in myotubes. The variable dynamics observed for individual nuclei within a single myotube are likely to result from the stochastic activity of competing motors interacting with a complex bipolar microtubule cytoskeleton that is also continuously remodeled as the nuclei move. The three-dimensional rotation of myotube nuclei may facilitate their motility through the complex and crowded cellular environment of the developing muscle cell, allowing for proper myonuclear positioning.
动态的细胞骨架相互作用驱动着许多细胞类型中细胞核的运动和定位。在肌肉细胞发育过程中,成肌细胞融合形成具有规则排列的核沿着细胞长度的合胞体肌纤维。核易位在发育中的肌管中需要微管,但涉及的机制尚未阐明。我们发现,当细胞核主动穿过细胞时,它们会在三维空间中旋转。核膜、核仁以及核内的染色质中心一起作为一个整体旋转。核易位和旋转都需要完整的微管细胞骨架,它在核周围形成一个动态的双极网络。正向和负向微管动力蛋白,驱动蛋白-1 和动力蛋白,在肌管中定位于核膜。驱动蛋白-1 的定位至少部分是通过与 klar 相关蛋白/ ANC-1/突触同源(KASH)蛋白的相互作用介导的。驱动蛋白-1 的耗竭会破坏核旋转,并显著抑制核易位,导致核在肌管的中线异常聚集。动力蛋白的耗竭也会抑制核动力学,但程度较小,导致相邻核之间的间距改变。因此,来自核表面的相反定向的分子马达驱动肌管中核的运动。在单个肌管中观察到的单个核的不同动力学可能是由于相互竞争的分子马达的随机活性与复杂的双极微管细胞骨架相互作用的结果,该微管细胞骨架也随着核的运动不断重塑。肌管核的三维旋转可能有助于它们在发育中的肌肉细胞复杂而拥挤的细胞环境中的运动,从而实现适当的肌核定位。