reviewAnnual Review of BiochemistryMar 6, 2015Closed access

Lamins: Nuclear Intermediate Filament Proteins with Fundamental Functions in Nuclear Mechanics and Genome Regulation

Hebrew University of Jerusalem · Max Perutz Labs · +1 more institution

PubMed
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Abstract

Lamins are intermediate filament proteins that form a scaffold, termed nuclear lamina, at the nuclear periphery. A small fraction of lamins also localize throughout the nucleoplasm. Lamins bind to a growing number of nuclear protein complexes and are implicated in both nuclear and cytoskeletal organization, mechanical stability, chromatin organization, gene regulation, genome stability, differentiation, and tissue-specific functions. The lamin-based complexes and their specific functions also provide insights into possible disease mechanisms for human laminopathies, ranging from muscular dystrophy to accelerated aging, as observed in Hutchinson-Gilford progeria and atypical Werner syndromes.

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553
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29.51
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100%
References
311
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Authors

2

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Lamin
  • Nuclear lamina
  • Progeria
  • Intermediate filament
  • Nucleoplasm
  • Cell biology
  • Biology
  • Chromatin
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