TPR is required for cytoplasmic chromatin fragment formation during senescence
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Bartlett, Bethany M.; Kumar, Yatendra; Boyle, Shelagh; Chowdhury, Tamoghna; Quintanilla Cavia, Andrea; Boumendil, Charlene; Acosta Cobacho, Juan Carlos; Bickmore, Wendy A.Fecha
2024Derechos
© Copyright Bartlett et al. This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use and redistribution provided that the original author and source are credited.
Publicado en
eLife, 2024, 3(13), e101702
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Palabras clave
Cell biology
Chromosomes
Gene expression
Genome integrity
Heterochromatin
Human
Inflammation
Nuclear periphery
Oncogene
Senescence
Resumen/Abstract
During oncogene-induced senescence there are striking changes in the organisation of heterochromatin in the nucleus. This is accompanied by activation of a pro-inflammatory gene expression programme - the senescence-associated secretory phenotype (SASP) - driven by transcription factors such as NF-κB. The relationship between heterochromatin re-organisation and the SASP has been unclear. Here, we show that TPR, a protein of the nuclear pore complex basket required for heterochromatin re-organisation during senescence, is also required for the very early activation of NF-κB signalling during the stress-response phase of oncogene-induced senescence. This is prior to activation of the SASP and occurs without affecting NF-κB nuclear import. We show that TPR is required for the activation of innate immune signalling at these early stages of senescence and we link this to the formation of heterochromatin-enriched cytoplasmic chromatin fragments thought to bleb off from the nuclear periphery. We show that HMGA1 is also required for cytoplasmic chromatin fragment formation. Together these data suggest that re-organisation of heterochromatin is involved in altered structural integrity of the nuclear periphery during senescence, and that this can lead to activation of cytoplasmic nucleic acid sensing, NF-κB signalling, and activation of the SASP.
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