Role of ANC-1 in tethering nuclei to the actin cytoskeleton

DA Starr, M Han - Science, 2002 - science.org
Science, 2002science.org
Mutations in anc-1 (nuclear anchorage defective) disrupt the positioning of nuclei and
mitochondria in Caenorhabditis elegans. ANC-1 is shown to consist of mostly coiled regions
with a nuclear envelope localization domain (called the KASH domain) and an actin-binding
domain; this structure was conserved with the Drosophila protein Msp-300 and the
mammalian Syne proteins. Antibodies against ANC-1 localized cytoplasmically and were
enriched at the nuclear periphery in an UNC-84–dependent manner. Overexpression of the …
Mutations in anc-1 (nuclear anchorage defective) disrupt the positioning of nuclei and mitochondria in Caenorhabditis elegans. ANC-1 is shown to consist of mostly coiled regions with a nuclear envelope localization domain (called the KASH domain) and an actin-binding domain; this structure was conserved with theDrosophila protein Msp-300 and the mammalian Syne proteins. Antibodies against ANC-1 localized cytoplasmically and were enriched at the nuclear periphery in an UNC-84–dependent manner. Overexpression of the KASH domain or the actin-binding domain caused a dominant negative anchorage defect. Thus, ANC-1 may connect nuclei to the cytoskeleton by interacting with UNC-84 at the nuclear envelope and with actin in the cytoplasm.
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