[PDF][PDF] Nuclear condensation during mouse erythropoiesis requires caspase-3-mediated nuclear opening

B Zhao, Y Mei, MJ Schipma, EW Roth, R Bleher… - Developmental cell, 2016 - cell.com
B Zhao, Y Mei, MJ Schipma, EW Roth, R Bleher, JZ Rappoport, A Wickrema, J Yang, P Ji
Developmental cell, 2016cell.com
Mammalian erythropoiesis involves chromatin condensation that is initiated in the early
stage of terminal differentiation. The mechanisms of chromatin condensation during
erythropoiesis are unclear. Here, we show that the mouse erythroblast forms large, transient,
and recurrent nuclear openings that coincide with the condensation process. The opening
lacks nuclear lamina, nuclear pore complexes, and nuclear membrane, but it is distinct from
nuclear envelope changes that occur during apoptosis and mitosis. A fraction of the major …
Summary
Mammalian erythropoiesis involves chromatin condensation that is initiated in the early stage of terminal differentiation. The mechanisms of chromatin condensation during erythropoiesis are unclear. Here, we show that the mouse erythroblast forms large, transient, and recurrent nuclear openings that coincide with the condensation process. The opening lacks nuclear lamina, nuclear pore complexes, and nuclear membrane, but it is distinct from nuclear envelope changes that occur during apoptosis and mitosis. A fraction of the major histones are released from the nuclear opening and degraded in the cytoplasm. We demonstrate that caspase-3 is required for the nuclear opening formation throughout terminal erythropoiesis. Loss of caspase-3 or ectopic expression of a caspase-3 non-cleavable lamin B mutant blocks nuclear opening formation, histone release, chromatin condensation, and terminal erythroid differentiation. We conclude that caspase-3-mediated nuclear opening formation accompanied by histone release from the opening is a critical step toward chromatin condensation during erythropoiesis in mice.
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