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1.
Cell Rep ; 42(12): 113555, 2023 12 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38088930

ABSTRACT

Ataxia telangiectasia mutated (ATM) and ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) DNA damage response (DDR) kinases contain elastic domains. ATM also responds to reactive oxygen species (ROS) and ATR to nuclear mechanical stress. Mre11 mediates ATM activation following DNA damage; ATM mutations cause ataxia telangiectasia (A-T). Here, using in vivo imaging, electron microscopy, proteomic, and mechano-biology approaches, we study how ATM responds to mechanical stress. We report that cytoskeleton and ROS, but not Mre11, mediate ATM activation following cell deformation. ATM deficiency causes hyper-stiffness, stress fiber accumulation, Yes-associated protein (YAP) nuclear enrichment, plasma and nuclear membrane alterations during interstitial migration, and H3 hyper-methylation. ATM locates to the actin cytoskeleton and, following cytoskeleton stress, promotes phosphorylation of key cytoskeleton and chromatin regulators. Our data contribute to explain some clinical features of patients with A-T and pinpoint the existence of an integrated mechano-response in which ATM and ATR have distinct roles unrelated to their canonical DDR functions.


Subject(s)
Ataxia Telangiectasia , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases , Humans , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , Tumor Suppressor Proteins/metabolism , Ataxia Telangiectasia Mutated Proteins/metabolism , Chromatin/metabolism , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Proteomics , DNA-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Phosphorylation , DNA Damage , Cytoskeleton/metabolism
2.
Commun Biol ; 6(1): 715, 2023 07 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37438411

ABSTRACT

The nucleus plays a central role in several key cellular processes, including chromosome organisation, DNA replication and gene transcription. Recent work suggests an association between nuclear mechanics and cell-cycle progression, but many aspects of this connection remain unexplored. Here, by monitoring nuclear shape fluctuations at different cell cycle stages, we uncover increasing inward fluctuations in late G2 and in early prophase, which are initially transient, but develop into instabilities when approaching the nuclear-envelope breakdown. We demonstrate that such deformations correlate with chromatin condensation by perturbing both the chromatin and the cytoskeletal structures. We propose that the contrasting forces between an extensile stress and centripetal pulling from chromatin condensation could mechanically link chromosome condensation with nuclear-envelope breakdown, two main nuclear processes occurring during mitosis.


Subject(s)
Cell Nucleus , Chromatin , Humans , Mitosis , Prophase , Research Personnel
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