Nuclear poly-glutamine aggregates rupture the nuclear envelope and hinder its repair

Publication date

2024-11-04

Authors

Korsten, GielISNI 000000050678961X
Osinga, Miriam
Pelle, Robin A.
Serweta, Albert K.ISNI 0000000526615879
Hoogenberg, Baukje
Kampinga, Harm H.
Kapitein, LukasISNI 0000000389218112

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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cc_by

Abstract

Huntington's disease (HD) is caused by a polyglutamine expansion of the huntingtin protein, resulting in the formation of polyglutamine aggregates. The mechanisms of toxicity that result in the complex HD pathology remain only partially understood. Here, we show that nuclear polyglutamine aggregates induce nuclear envelope (NE) blebbing and ruptures that are often repaired incompletely. These ruptures coincide with disruptions of the nuclear lamina and lead to lamina scar formation. Expansion microscopy enabled resolving the ultrastructure of nuclear aggregates and revealed polyglutamine fibrils sticking into the cytosol at rupture sites, suggesting a mechanism for incomplete repair. Furthermore, we found that NE repair factors often accumulated near nuclear aggregates, consistent with stalled repair. These findings implicate nuclear polyQ aggregate-induced loss of NE integrity as a potential contributing factor to Huntington's disease and other polyglutamine diseases.

Keywords

Cell Biology

Citation

Korsten, G, Osinga, M, Pelle, R A, Serweta, A K, Hoogenberg, B, Kampinga, H H & Kapitein, L C 2024, 'Nuclear poly-glutamine aggregates rupture the nuclear envelope and hinder its repair', The Journal of cell biology, vol. 223, no. 11, e202307142. https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.202307142