TY - JOUR
T1 - TPEN, a Zn2+/Fe2+ chelator with low affinity for Ca2+, inhibits lamin assembly, destabilizes nuclear architecture and may independently protect nuclei from apoptosis in vitro
AU - Shumaker, Dale K.
AU - Vann, Lewis R.
AU - Goldberg, Martin W.
AU - Allen, Terence D.
AU - Wilson, Katherine L.
N1 - Funding Information:
Dale K. Shumaker and Lewis R. Vann are co-equal first authors. We gratefully acknowledge and thank Ian C.B. Marshall and Tracey Michele Gant, whose preliminary experiments showing that TPEN inhibited nuclear size provided the foundation for this paper. This work was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health (to KLW) and the International Human Frontiers Science Program (to KLW and TDA).
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - We used Xenopus egg extracts to examine the effects of TPEN, a chelator with strong affinities for Zn2+, Fe2+, and Mn2+, on nuclear assembly in vitro. At concentrations above 1 mM, TPEN blocked the assembly of the nuclear lamina and produced nuclei that were profoundly sensitive to stress-induced balloon-like 'shedding' of nuclear membranes away from chromatin-associated membranes. TPEN-arrested nuclei were also defective for DNA replication, which could be explained as secondary to the lack of a lamina. Imaging of TPEN-arrested nuclei by field emission in-lens scanning electron microscopy (FEISEM) revealed clustered, structurally-perturbed nuclear pore complexes. TPEN-arrested nuclei were defective in the accumulation of fluorescent karyophilic proteins. All detectable effects caused by TPEN were downstream of the effects of BAPTA, a Ca2+/Zn2+ chelator that blocks pore complex assembly at two distinct early stages. Surprisingly, TPEN-arrested nuclei, but not control nuclei, remained active for replication in apoptotic extracts, as assayed by [32P]-dCTP incorporation into high molecular weight DNA, suggesting that TPEN blocks a metal-binding protein(s) required for nuclear destruction during programmed cell death.
AB - We used Xenopus egg extracts to examine the effects of TPEN, a chelator with strong affinities for Zn2+, Fe2+, and Mn2+, on nuclear assembly in vitro. At concentrations above 1 mM, TPEN blocked the assembly of the nuclear lamina and produced nuclei that were profoundly sensitive to stress-induced balloon-like 'shedding' of nuclear membranes away from chromatin-associated membranes. TPEN-arrested nuclei were also defective for DNA replication, which could be explained as secondary to the lack of a lamina. Imaging of TPEN-arrested nuclei by field emission in-lens scanning electron microscopy (FEISEM) revealed clustered, structurally-perturbed nuclear pore complexes. TPEN-arrested nuclei were defective in the accumulation of fluorescent karyophilic proteins. All detectable effects caused by TPEN were downstream of the effects of BAPTA, a Ca2+/Zn2+ chelator that blocks pore complex assembly at two distinct early stages. Surprisingly, TPEN-arrested nuclei, but not control nuclei, remained active for replication in apoptotic extracts, as assayed by [32P]-dCTP incorporation into high molecular weight DNA, suggesting that TPEN blocks a metal-binding protein(s) required for nuclear destruction during programmed cell death.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0143-4160(98)90114-2
DO - 10.1016/S0143-4160(98)90114-2
M3 - Review article
C2 - 9601611
AN - SCOPUS:0031596834
SN - 0143-4160
VL - 23
SP - 151
EP - 164
JO - Cell Calcium
JF - Cell Calcium
IS - 2-3
ER -