Nadia Korfali
University of Edinburgh
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Featured researches published by Nadia Korfali.
The EMBO Journal | 2002
Sandrine Ruchaud; Nadia Korfali; Pascal Villa; Timothy Kottke; Colin Dingwall; Scott H. Kaufmann; William C. Earnshaw
To study the role of caspase‐6 during nuclear disassembly, we generated a chicken DT40 cell line in which both alleles of the caspase‐6 gene were disrupted. No obvious morphological differences were observed in the apoptotic process in caspase‐6‐ deficient cells compared with the wild type. However, examination of apoptosis in a cell‐free system revealed a block in chromatin condensation and apoptotic body formation when nuclei from HeLa cells expressing lamin A or lamin A‐transfected Jurkat cells were incubated in caspase‐6‐deficient apoptotic extracts. Transfection of exogenous caspase‐6 into the clone reversed this phenotype. Lamins A and C, which are caspase‐6‐only substrates, were cleaved by the wild‐type and heterozygous apoptotic extracts but not by the extracts lacking caspase‐6. Furthermore, the caspase‐6 inhibitor z‐VEID‐fmk mimicked the effects of caspase‐6 deficiency and prevented the cleavage of lamin A. Taken together, these observations indicate that caspase‐6 activity is essential for lamin A cleavage and that when lamin A is present it must be cleaved in order for the chromosomal DNA to undergo complete condensation during apoptotic execution.
Nucleus | 2012
Nadia Korfali; Gavin S. Wilkie; Selene K. Swanson; Vlastimil Srsen; Jose I. de las Heras; Dzmitry G. Batrakou; Poonam Malik; Nikolaj Zuleger; Alastair Kerr; Laurence Florens; Eric C. Schirmer
One hypothesis to explain how mutations in the same nuclear envelope proteins yield pathologies focused in distinct tissues is that as yet unidentified tissue-specific partners mediate the disease pathologies. The nuclear envelope proteome was recently determined from leukocytes and muscle. Here the same methodology is applied to liver and a direct comparison of the liver, muscle and leukocyte data sets is presented. At least 74 novel transmembrane proteins identified in these studies have been directly confirmed at the nuclear envelope. Within this set, RT-PCR, western blot and staining of tissue cryosections confirms that the protein complement of the nuclear envelope is clearly distinct from one tissue to another. Bioinformatics reveals similar divergence between tissues across the larger data sets. For proteins acting in complexes according to interactome data, the whole complex often exhibited the same tissue-specificity. Other tissue-specific nuclear envelope proteins identified were known proteins with functions in signaling and gene regulation. The high tissue specificity in the nuclear envelope likely underlies the complex disease pathologies and argues that all organelle proteomes warrant re-examination in multiple tissues.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2010
Nadia Korfali; Gavin S. Wilkie; Selene K. Swanson; Vlastimil Srsen; Dzmitry G. Batrakou; Elizabeth A.L. Fairley; Poonam Malik; Nikolaj Zuleger; Alexander Goncharevich; Jose I. de las Heras; David A. Kelly; Alastair Kerr; Laurence Florens; Eric C. Schirmer
A favored hypothesis to explain the pathology underlying nuclear envelopathies is that mutations in nuclear envelope proteins alter genome/chromatin organization and thus gene expression. To identify nuclear envelope proteins that play roles in genome organization, we analyzed nuclear envelopes from resting and phytohemagglutinin-activated leukocytes because leukocytes have a particularly high density of peripheral chromatin that undergoes significant reorganization upon such activation. Thus, nuclear envelopes were isolated from leukocytes in the two states and analyzed by multidimensional protein identification technology using an approach that used expected contaminating membranes as subtractive fractions. A total of 3351 proteins were identified between both nuclear envelope data sets among which were 87 putative nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins (NETs) that were not identified in a previous proteomics analysis of liver nuclear envelopes. Nuclear envelope localization was confirmed for 11 new NETs using tagged fusion proteins and antibodies on spleen cryosections. 27% of the new proteins identified were unique to one or the other of the two leukocyte states. Differences in expression between activated and resting leukocytes were confirmed for some NETs by RT-PCR, and most of these proteins appear to only be expressed in certain types of blood cells. Several known proteins identified in both data sets have functions in chromatin organization and gene regulation. To test whether the novel NETs identified might include those that also regulate chromatin, nine were run through two screens for different chromatin effects. One screen found two NETs that can recruit a specific gene locus to the nuclear periphery, and the second found a different NET that promotes chromatin condensation. The variation in the protein milieu with pharmacological activation of the same cell population and consequences for gene regulation suggest that the nuclear envelope is a complex regulatory system with significant influences on genome organization.
Molecular & Cellular Proteomics | 2011
Gavin S. Wilkie; Nadia Korfali; Selene K. Swanson; Poonam Malik; Vlastimil Srsen; Dzmitry G. Batrakou; Jose I. de las Heras; Nikolaj Zuleger; Alastair Kerr; Laurence Florens; Eric C. Schirmer
Nuclear envelopes from liver and a neuroblastoma cell line have previously been analyzed by proteomics; however, most diseases associated with the nuclear envelope affect muscle. To determine whether muscle has unique nuclear envelope proteins, rat skeletal muscle nuclear envelopes were prepared and analyzed by multidimensional protein identification technology. Many novel muscle-specific proteins were identified that did not appear in previous nuclear envelope data sets. Nuclear envelope residence was confirmed for 11 of these by expression of fusion proteins and by antibody staining of muscle tissue cryosections. Moreover, transcript levels for several of the newly identified nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins increased during muscle differentiation using mouse and human in vitro model systems. Some of these proteins tracked with microtubules at the nuclear surface in interphase cells and accumulated at the base of the microtubule spindle in mitotic cells, suggesting they may associate with complexes that connect the nucleus to the cytoskeleton. The finding of tissue-specific proteins in the skeletal muscle nuclear envelope proteome argues the importance of analyzing nuclear envelopes from all tissues linked to disease and suggests that general investigation of tissue differences in organellar proteomes might yield critical insights.
Genome Biology | 2013
Nikolaj Zuleger; Shelagh Boyle; David A. Kelly; Jose I. de las Heras; Vassiliki Lazou; Nadia Korfali; Dzmitry G. Batrakou; K. Natalie Randles; Glenn E. Morris; David J. Harrison; Wendy A. Bickmore; Eric C. Schirmer
BackgroundDifferent cell types have distinctive patterns of chromosome positioning in the nucleus. Although ectopic affinity-tethering of specific loci can be used to relocate chromosomes to the nuclear periphery, endogenous nuclear envelope proteins that control such a mechanism in mammalian cells have yet to be widely identified.ResultsTo search for such proteins, 23 nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins were screened for their ability to promote peripheral localization of human chromosomes in HT1080 fibroblasts. Five of these proteins had strong effects on chromosome 5, but individual proteins affected different subsets of chromosomes. The repositioning effects were reversible and the proteins with effects all exhibited highly tissue-restricted patterns of expression. Depletion of two nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins that were preferentially expressed in liver each reduced the normal peripheral positioning of chromosome 5 in liver cells.ConclusionsThe discovery of nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins that can modulate chromosome position and have restricted patterns of expression may enable dissection of the functional relevance of tissue-specific patterns of radial chromosome positioning.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences | 2010
Poonam Malik; Nadia Korfali; Vlastimil Srsen; Vassiliki Lazou; Dzmitry G. Batrakou; Nikolaj Zuleger; Deirdre M. Kavanagh; Gavin S. Wilkie; Martin W. Goldberg; Eric C. Schirmer
Nuclear envelope complexity is expanding with respect to identification of protein components. Here we test the validity of proteomics results that identified 67 novel predicted nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins (NETs) from liver by directly comparing 30 as tagged fusions using targeting assays. This confirmed 21 as NETs, but 4 only targeted in certain cell types, underscoring the complexity of interactions that tether NETs to the nuclear envelope. Four NETs accumulated at the nuclear rim in normal fibroblasts but not in fibroblasts lacking lamin A, suggesting involvement of lamin A in tethering them in the nucleus. However, intriguingly, for the NETs tested alternative mechanisms for nuclear envelope retention could be found in Jurkat cells that normally lack lamin A. This study expands by a factor of three the number of liver NETs analyzed, bringing the total confirmed to 31, and shows that several have multiple mechanisms for nuclear envelope retention.
Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2012
Poonam Malik; Alijan Tabarraei; Ralph H. Kehlenbach; Nadia Korfali; Ryota Iwasawa; Sheila V. Graham; Eric C. Schirmer
Background: Several aspects of herpes simplex virus ICP27 trafficking remain unclear. Results: We investigated if ICP27 could interact with the nuclear pore complex, finding that ICP27 directly binds the core nucleoporin Nup62. Conclusion: ICP27 association with Nup62 may provide additional binding sites at the pore for ICP27 shuttling. Significance: We propose that ICP27 competes with some transport receptors, resulting in inhibition of host pathways and supporting ICP27-mediated transport of HSV-1 mRNAs. The herpes simplex virus ICP27 protein is important for the expression and nuclear export of viral mRNAs. Although several binding sites have been mapped along the ICP27 sequence for various RNA and protein partners, including the transport receptor TAP of the host cell nuclear transport machinery, several aspects of ICP27 trafficking through the nuclear pore complex remain unclear. We investigated if ICP27 could interact directly with the nuclear pore complex itself, finding that ICP27 directly binds the core nucleoporin Nup62. This is confirmed through co-immunoprecipitation and in vitro binding assays with purified components. Mapping with ICP27 deletion and point mutants further shows that the interaction requires sequences in both the N and C termini of ICP27. Expression of wild type ICP27 protein inhibited both classical, importin α/β-dependent and transportin-dependent nuclear import. In contrast, an ICP27 point mutant that does not interact with Nup62 had no such inhibitory effect. We suggest that ICP27 association with Nup62 provides additional binding sites at the nuclear pore for ICP27 shuttling, thus supporting ICP27-mediated transport. We propose that ICP27 competes with some host cell transport receptors for binding, resulting in inhibition of those host transport pathways.
Biochemical Society Transactions | 2008
Nikolaj Zuleger; Nadia Korfali; Eric C. Schirmer
Work in the nuclear transport field has led to an incredibly detailed description of protein translocation through the central channel of the nuclear pore complex, yet the mechanism by which nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins reach the inner nuclear membrane after synthesis in the endoplasmic reticulum is still hotly debated. Three different translocation models have gained experimental support: (i) simple lateral diffusion through the nuclear envelope membrane system; (ii) translocation by vesicle fusion events; and (iii) a variation on classical transport mediated by the nuclear pore complex. Although these models appear to be mutually exclusive, in the present paper we argue that they probably all function for different inner nuclear membrane proteins according to their unique characteristics.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2009
Nadia Korfali; Elizabeth A.L. Fairley; Selene K. Swanson; Laurence Florens; Eric C. Schirmer
The nuclear envelope (NE) is a double membrane system that is both a part of the endoplasmic reticulum and part of the nucleus. As its constituent proteins tend to be highly complexed with nuclear and cytoplasmic components, it is notoriously difficult to purify. Two methods can reduce this difficulty for the identification of nuclear membrane proteins: comparison to contaminating membranes and chemical extractions to enrich for certain groups of proteins. The purification of nuclear envelopes and contaminating microsomal membranes is described here along with procedures for chemical extraction using salt and detergent, chaotropes, or alkaline solutions. Each extraction method enriches for different combinations of nuclear envelope proteins. Finally, we describe the analysis of these fractions with MudPIT, a proteomics methodology that avoids gel extraction of bands to facilitate identification of minor proteins and membrane proteins that do not resolve well on gels. Together these three approaches can significantly increase the output of proteomics studies aimed at identifying the protein complement of subcellular membrane systems.
PLOS ONE | 2011
Nadia Korfali; Vlastimil Srsen; Martin Waterfall; Dzmitry G. Batrakou; Vanja Pekovic; Christopher J. Hutchison; Eric C. Schirmer
Disruption of cell cycle regulation is one mechanism proposed for how nuclear envelope protein mutation can cause disease. Thus far only a few nuclear envelope proteins have been tested/found to affect cell cycle progression: to identify others, 39 novel nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins were screened for their ability to alter flow cytometry cell cycle/DNA content profiles when exogenously expressed. Eight had notable effects with seven increasing and one decreasing the 4N:2N ratio. We subsequently focused on NET4/Tmem53 that lost its effects in p53(-/-) cells and retinoblastoma protein-deficient cells. NET4/TMEM53 knockdown by siRNA altered flow cytometry cell cycle/DNA content profiles in a similar way as overexpression. NET4/TMEM53 knockdown did not affect total retinoblastoma protein levels, unlike nuclear envelope-associated proteins Lamin A and LAP2α. However, a decrease in phosphorylated retinoblastoma protein was observed along with a doubling of p53 levels and a 7-fold increase in p21. Consequently cells withdrew from the cell cycle, which was confirmed in MRC5 cells by a drop in the percentage of cells expressing Ki-67 antigen and an increase in the number of cells stained for ß-galactosidase. The ß-galactosidase upregulation suggests that cells become prematurely senescent. Finally, the changes in retinoblastoma protein, p53, and p21 resulting from loss of NET4/Tmem53 were dependent upon active p38 MAP kinase. The finding that roughly a fifth of nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins screened yielded alterations in flow cytometry cell cycle/DNA content profiles suggests a much greater influence of the nuclear envelope on the cell cycle than is widely held.