Nesprins: a novel family of spectrin-repeat-containing proteins that localize to the nuclear membrane in multiple tissues
Qiuping Zhang1,
Jeremy N. Skepper2,
Fangtang Yang3,
John D. Davies1,
Laszlo Hegyi1,2,
Roland G. Roberts5,
Peter L. Weissberg1,
Juliet A. Ellis4 and
Catherine M. Shanahan1,*
1 Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, University of Cambridge, Box 110, Addenbrookes Hospital, Hills Road, Cambridge, CB2 2QQ, UK
2 Department of Anatomy, Multi-Imaging Centre, Tennis Court Rd, Cambridge, CB2 3DY, UK
3 Centre for Veterinary Science, University of Cambridge, Madingley Road, Cambridge, CB3 0ES, UK
4 Randall Centre for the Molecular Mechanism of Cell Function, Kings College, New Hunts House, Guys Campus, London, SE1 1UL, UK
5 Division of Medical & Molecular Genetics, GKT Medical School, 8th Floor, Guys Tower, Guys Hospital, London SE1 9RT, UK

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Fig. 1. Cloning and expression of rat nesprin-1. (A) Northern blot showing high expression of a 10 kb transcript of rat nesprin-1 (1RA1) in aortic tissue compared with cultured, passage 12, dedifferentiated VSMCs and fibroblasts. (B) Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis of rat nesprin-1 (1RA1), showing an increase in expression during developmental differentiation of the aorta. f17, foetal day 17; f19, foetal day 19; n1, neonatal day 1; w2-w8, weeks 2 to 8; ad, adult and c, negative control. The graph shows relative expression of 1RA1 at each stage normalized to a GAPDH control. (C) Schematic representation of isolation of rat nesprin-1 cDNA sequence.
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Fig. 4. Predicted protein structure of nesprins-1 and -2. (A) Human nesprin protein domains generated by SMART and ProfileScan programmes. (B) Alignment of the 21 spectrin repeats of the nesprin-1 protein, showing homology domains within the three helices of each repeat. All G (orange) and P (yellow) residues are coloured. Other colouring is by conserved property in >55% of any column: uncoloured residues lack a sufficiently conserved property. Blue, hydrophobic residues; purple, negative residues, green, hydrophilic residues. (C) TMpred analysis showing the predicted hydrophobic TM domain in nesprin-1. (D) Alignment of the 60 C-terminal residues of nesprins showing homology with Drosophila Klarischt and C.elegans (unknown). Note the lack of sequence homology with C-terminal TM domains (shown in bold) found in other NE proteins, including emerin and myoferlin.
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Fig. 5. (A) Nesprin-EGFP fusion constructs and (B) their subcellular localization in transfected COS-7 cells as indicated. (IX) EGFP vector alone.
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Fig. 8. Subcellular colocalization of endogenous nesprin-1 in C2C12 myoblasts (A,C) and human VMSCs (B,D,E). Cytoskeletal -actin (A), ER protein calnexin (B), and NE proteins, emerin (C), LAP1 (D), lamin A/C (E). Nesprins are shown in green, other markers in red (as indicated) and the nucleus in blue. Yellow in merged images indicates regions of colocalization.
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Fig. 9. Immunogold localization of nesprin-1 in C2C12 myoblasts. Gold particles (shown as black) localized along the NE are arrowed. Gold particles are also present (arrows) in heterochromatic regions of the nucleus (N) and are absent from euchromatic zones. In some cells, prominent localization to the nucleolus (Nu) was observed (B), as indicated by arrowheads.
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Fig. 10. Subcellular colocalization of Nesprin-1 in human tissues and in C2C12 differentiation. (A) Immunofluorescence of nesprin-1 in human tissues; aorta (I-III), heart (VI-VII), skeletal muscle (VIII-IX), spleen (X-XI) and leukocytes from peripheral blood (XII-XIII). Nesprins are shown in green, emerin and myosin in red, the nucleus in blue and rabbit IgG is a negative control (IV-V). (B) Immunolocalization of nesprin-1 in mouse C2C12 myoblasts (I-III) and myotubes (V-VII). Nesprin-1 is shown in green, emerin (IV and VIII), -actin and myosin are shown in red.
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© The Company of Biologists Ltd 2001