Premium
SATB2‐LEMD2 interaction links nuclear shape plasticity to regulation of cognition‐related genes
Author(s) -
Feurle Patrick,
Abentung Andreas,
Cera Isabella,
Wahl Nico,
Ablinger Cornelia,
Bucher Michael,
Stefan Eduard,
Sprenger Simon,
Teis David,
Fischer Andre,
Laighneach Aodán,
Whitton Laura,
Morris Derek W,
Apostolova Galina,
Dechant Georg
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
the embo journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.484
H-Index - 392
eISSN - 1460-2075
pISSN - 0261-4189
DOI - 10.15252/embj.2019103701
Subject(s) - library science , cognitive science , german , neuroscience , psychology , computer science , philosophy , linguistics
SATB2 is a schizophrenia risk gene and is genetically associated with human intelligence. How it affects cognition at molecular level is currently unknown. Here, we show that interactions between SATB2, a chromosomal scaffolding protein, and the inner nuclear membrane protein LEMD2 orchestrate the response of pyramidal neurons to neuronal activation. Exposure to novel environment in vivo causes changes in nuclear shape of CA1 hippocampal neurons via a SATB2‐dependent mechanism. The activity‐driven plasticity of the nuclear envelope requires not only SATB2, but also its protein interactor LEMD2 and the ESCRT‐III/VPS4 membrane‐remodeling complex. Furthermore, LEMD2 depletion in cortical neurons, similar to SATB2 ablation, affects neuronal activity‐dependent regulation of multiple rapid and delayed primary response genes. In human genetic data, LEMD2‐regulated genes are enriched for de novo mutations reported in intellectual disability and schizophrenia and are, like SATB2‐regulated genes, enriched for common variants associated with schizophrenia and cognitive function. Hence, interactions between SATB2 and the inner nuclear membrane protein LEMD2 influence gene expression programs in pyramidal neurons that are linked to cognitive ability and psychiatric disorder etiology.