Laminopathies disrupt epigenomic developmental programs and cell fate

J Perovanovic, S Dell'Orso, VF Gnochi… - Science translational …, 2016 - science.org
J Perovanovic, S Dell'Orso, VF Gnochi, JK Jaiswal, V Sartorelli, C Vigouroux, K Mamchaoui…
Science translational medicine, 2016science.org
The nuclear envelope protein lamin A is encoded by the lamin A/C (LMNA) gene, which can
contain missense mutations that cause Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD)(p.
R453W). We fused mutated forms of the lamin A protein to bacterial DNA adenine
methyltransferase (Dam) to define euchromatic-heterochromatin (epigenomic) transitions at
the nuclear envelope during myogenesis (using DamID-seq). Lamin A missense mutations
disrupted appropriate formation of lamin A–associated heterochromatin domains in an allele …
The nuclear envelope protein lamin A is encoded by the lamin A/C (LMNA) gene, which can contain missense mutations that cause Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD) (p.R453W). We fused mutated forms of the lamin A protein to bacterial DNA adenine methyltransferase (Dam) to define euchromatic-heterochromatin (epigenomic) transitions at the nuclear envelope during myogenesis (using DamID-seq). Lamin A missense mutations disrupted appropriate formation of lamin A–associated heterochromatin domains in an allele-specific manner—findings that were confirmed by chromatin immunoprecipitation–DNA sequencing (ChIP-seq) in murine H2K cells and DNA methylation studies in fibroblasts from muscular dystrophy patient who carried a distinct LMNA mutation (p.H222P). Observed perturbations of the epigenomic transitions included exit from pluripotency and cell cycle programs [euchromatin (open, transcribed) to heterochromatin (closed, silent)], as well as induction of myogenic loci (heterochromatin to euchromatin). In muscle biopsies from patients with either a gain- or change-of-function LMNA gene mutation or a loss-of-function mutation in the emerin gene, both of which cause EDMD, we observed inappropriate loss of heterochromatin formation at the Sox2 pluripotency locus, which was associated with persistent mRNA expression of Sox2. Overexpression of Sox2 inhibited myogenic differentiation in human immortalized myoblasts. Our findings suggest that nuclear envelopathies are disorders of developmental epigenetic programming that result from altered formation of lamina-associated domains.
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