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Roles of endothelial A-type lamins in migration of T cells on and under endothelial layers
Author(s) -
Kwang Hoon Song,
Jae-Hyun Lee,
Hyoungjun Park,
Hye Mi Kim,
Jeehun Park,
Keon Woo Kwon,
Junsang Doh
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
scientific reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.24
H-Index - 213
ISSN - 2045-2322
DOI - 10.1038/srep23412
Subject(s) - lamin , cytoplasm , microbiology and biotechnology , cell migration , cell type , nucleus , chemistry , cell , nuclear lamina , endothelial stem cell , biophysics , biology , nuclear protein , in vitro , biochemistry , transcription factor , gene
Stiff nuclei in cell-dense microenvironments may serve as distinct biomechanical cues for cell migration, but such a possibility has not been tested experimentally. As a first step addressing this question, we altered nuclear stiffness of endothelial cells (ECs) by reducing the expression of A-type lamins using siRNA, and investigated the migration of T cells on and under EC layers. While most T cells crawling on control EC layers avoided crossing over EC nuclei, a significantly higher fraction of T cells on EC layers with reduced expression of A-type lamins crossed over EC nuclei. This result suggests that stiff EC nuclei underlying T cells may serve as “duro-repulsive” cues to direct T cell migration toward less stiff EC cytoplasm. During subendothelial migration under EC layers with reduced expression of A-type lamins, T cells made prolonged contact and substantially deformed EC nuclei, resulting in reduced speed and directional persistence. This result suggests that EC nuclear stiffness promotes fast and directionally persistent subendothelial migration of T cells by allowing minimum interaction between T cells and EC nuclei.

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