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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2003 Aug;60(8):1607–1612. doi: 10.1007/s00018-003-3004-0

Intermediate filaments: novel assembly models and exciting new functions for nuclear lamins

H Herrmann 1, R Foisner 2,
PMCID: PMC11138916  PMID: 14504651

Abstract

Intermediate filament (IF) proteins constitute a highly diverse family of fibrous proteins in metazoans, which assemble into 10-nm-thick filaments in the cytoplasm and the nucleus. Novel recent insights into the in vitro assembly mechanism have revealed principal differences in the formation of cytoplasmic and nuclear filaments. Moreover, the past years have seen dramatic developments for the nuclear specific IF proteins, the lamins. While in the past lamins have been assumed to form only a structural scaffold at the nuclear periphery, their discovery in the nuclear interior, the identification of novel lamin-binding proteins and the functional disruption of lamin structures have brought to light essential functions for lamins in fundamental cellular events such as chromatin organization, DNA replication and RNA transcription. Furthermore, mutations in lamins and lamin-binding proteins have been demonstrated to cause various different human diseases, affecting muscle, heart, neuronal, adipose and bone tissue or leading to premature ageing. However, the molecular basis of these diseases is just beginning to emerge.

Keywords: Chromatin, coiled coils, filament assembly, lamina, lamina-associated proteins, laminopathy, nuclear membrane, unit-lenght filaments

Footnotes

Received 9 January 2003; received after revision 24 February 2003; accepted 14 March 2003


Articles from Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS are provided here courtesy of Springer

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