Skoltech is an international graduate research-focused university that was founded by the group of world-renowned scientists in 2011. Skoltech's curriculum focuses on technology and innovation, offering Master's programs in 11 technological disciplines. Students receive rigorous theoretical and practical training, design their own research projects, participate in internships and gain entrepreneurial skills in English. The faculty is comprised of current researchers with international accreditation and achievements.

Russian scientists discover a new function of the nucleus lamina proteins

A group of Russian scientists discovered a new function that the nuclear lamina (NL) proteins perform to arrange the genetic material inside cells. Understanding the mechanisms involved in gene packaging will help one to learn how to control and regulate the work of the genes. The results of their study were published in Nature Communications.

The NL lines the living organisms’ cell nuclei from the inside, with its proteins being the key helpers for the cell nucleus that functions as the chromosomes storage. It is well understood that the NL is responsible for the intranuclear chromatin architecture and that mutations in its proteins can lead to severe pathologies, such as progeria, manifested as very fast premature aging. The chromosome packing density varies inside the nucleus, with smaller densely compacted areas remaining inactive and expanded areas containing highly active genes. The NL proteins are capable of changing chromatin structure and density.

In their new study, a large group of scientists which included researchers from Skoltech, found new facts about the processes running in the cell nucleus. Their model object was Drosophila which has become a fixture in scientific experiments and discoveries. The researchers analyzed chromatin and the NL it interacts with using advanced laboratory and bioinformatics methods and found out that the NL plays a dual role in chromatin organization.

“We conducted an experiment jointly with our colleagues from the Institute of Gene Biology, RAS, in which we destroyed the NL in Drosophila’s cells and looked at how this affects the packaging of chromosomes inside the nucleus. We could clearly see that once the NL was destroyed, the chromosomes moved away from the nuclear envelope, forming a more densely packed pattern. Having applied fluorescent paint to the chromosomes, we studied them under the microscope and noticed that the dense chromatin globules that had been attached to the NL started to unfurl as they moved farther away from the lamina. Then our colleagues from the MSU Physics Department made simulations and showed that a single contact with the NL is enough for the chromatin globules to become more compact. It turns out that the NL makes the parts of the chromosomes it comes in direct contact with more condensed, while reducing the overall packing density of the chromosomes within the nucleus,” explains Skoltech researcher Ekaterina Khrameeva.

The genetic material packaging in the nucleus affects the work of genes. Each study in the field of chromatin organization in the nucleus is an important step towards the future where we can manage our genes.

***

The Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology (Skoltech) is a private graduate research university. Established in 2011 in collaboration with the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Skoltech cultivates a new generation of researchers and entrepreneurs, promotes advanced scientific knowledge and fosters innovative technology to address critical issues facing Russia and the world in the third millennium. Skoltech applies the best Russian and international research and educational practices, with particular emphasis on entrepreneurship and innovation. Web: https://www.skoltech.ru/

Contact:

Alina Chernova,

Scientific Communications Manager

Phone: +7 905 5653633

Contact information:
Skoltech Communications
+7 (495) 280 14 81

Share on VK