학술논문

The E262K mutation in Lamin A links nuclear proteostasis imbalance to laminopathy‐associated premature aging.
Document Type
Article
Source
Aging Cell. Nov2022, Vol. 21 Issue 11, p1-18. 18p.
Subject
*PREMATURE aging (Medicine)
*DNA repair
*NUCLEAR DNA
*GENETIC mutation
*MISSENSE mutation
*DNA mismatch repair
Language
ISSN
1474-9718
Abstract
Deleterious, mostly de novo, mutations in the lamin A (LMNA) gene cause spatio‐functional nuclear abnormalities that result in several laminopathy‐associated progeroid conditions. In this study, exome sequencing in a sixteen‐year‐old male with manifestations of premature aging led to the identification of a mutation, c.784G>A, in LMNA, resulting in a missense protein variant, p.Glu262Lys (E262K), that aggregates in nucleoplasm. While bioinformatic analyses reveal the instability and pathogenicity of LMNAE262K, local unfolding of the mutation‐harboring helical region drives the structural collapse of LMNAE262K into aggregates. The E262K mutation also disrupts SUMOylation of lysine residues by preventing UBE2I binding to LMNAE262K, thereby reducing LMNAE262K degradation, aggregated LMNAE262K sequesters nuclear chaperones, proteasomal proteins, and DNA repair proteins. Consequently, aggregates of LMNAE262K disrupt nuclear proteostasis and DNA repair response. Thus, we report a structure–function association of mutant LMNAE262K with toxicity, which is consistent with the concept that loss of nuclear proteostasis causes early aging in laminopathies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]