2017 Annual Meeting
(191k) The Mammalian Linc Complexregulates Genome Transcriptionalresponses to Substrate Rigidity
Authors
Qiao Zhang - Presenter, University of Florida
Samer Alam, University of Florida-Gainesville
Yuan Li, University of Florida
Ram Kuchibhotla, University of Florida
Kyle Roux, Sanford Children's Health Research Center
Tanmay Lele, University of Florida
Nripesh Prasad, HudsonAlpha Institute of Biotechnology
Birendra KC, Sanford Children’s Health Research Center
Varun Aggarwal, University of Florda
Shristi Shrestha, HudsonAlpha Institute of Biotechnology
Jeffrey A. Nickerson, University of Massachusetts Medical School
Mechanical integration of the nucleus with the extracellular matrix (ECM) is established by linkage between the cytoskeleton and the nucleus. This integration is hypothesized to mediate sensing of ECM rigidity, but parsing the function of nucleus-cytoskeleton linkage from other mechanisms has remained a central challenge. Here we took advantage of the fact that the LINC (linker of nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton) complex is a known molecular linker of the nucleus to the cytoskeleton, and asked how it regulates the sensitivity of genome-wide transcription to substratum rigidity. We show that gene mechanosensitivity is preserved after LINC disruption, but reversed in direction. Combined with myosin inhibition studies, we identify genes that depend on nuclear tension for their regulation. We also show that LINC disruption does not attenuate nuclear shape sensitivity to substrate rigidity. Our results show for the first time that the LINC complex facilitates mechano-regulation of expression across the genome.