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			<titleStmt><title level='a'>N-terminal tags impair the ability of lamin A to provide structural support to the nucleus</title></titleStmt>
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				<publisher>The Company of Biologists Ltd</publisher>
				<date>08/15/2024</date>
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				<bibl> 
					<idno type="par_id">10646197</idno>
					<idno type="doi">10.1242/jcs.262207</idno>
					<title level='j'>Journal of Cell Science</title>
<idno>0021-9533</idno>
<biblScope unit="volume">137</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="issue">16</biblScope>					

					<author>Jacob Odell</author><author>Jan Lammerding</author>
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			<abstract><ab><![CDATA[<title>ABSTRACT</title> <p>Lamins are intermediate filament proteins that contribute to numerous cellular functions, including nuclear morphology and mechanical stability. The N-terminal head domain of lamin is crucial for higher order filament assembly and function, yet the effects of commonly used N-terminal tags on lamin function remain largely unexplored. Here, we systematically studied the effect of two differently sized tags on lamin A (LaA) function in a mammalian cell model engineered to allow for precise control of expression of tagged lamin proteins. Untagged, FLAG-tagged and GFP-tagged LaA completely rescued nuclear shape defects when expressed at similar levels in lamin A/C-deficient (Lmna–/–) MEFs, and all LaA constructs prevented increased nuclear envelope ruptures in these cells. N-terminal tags, however, altered the nuclear localization of LaA and impaired the ability of LaA to restore nuclear deformability and to recruit emerin to the nuclear membrane in Lmna–/– MEFs. Our finding that tags impede some LaA functions but not others might explain the partial loss of function phenotypes when tagged lamins are expressed in model organisms and should caution researchers using tagged lamins to study the nucleus.</p>]]></ab></abstract>
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<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>INTRODUCTION</head><p>Lamins are nuclear intermediate filament proteins that form a dense protein meshwork underlying the inner nuclear membrane <ref type="bibr">(Aebi et al., 1986;</ref><ref type="bibr">Buxboim et al., 2023;</ref><ref type="bibr">Shimi et al., 2015)</ref>. Lamins have many important functions in metazoan cells, where they provide structural support to the nucleus, regulate nuclear morphology and influence gene expression <ref type="bibr">(de Leeuw et al., 2018;</ref><ref type="bibr">Kalukula et al., 2022;</ref><ref type="bibr">Vahabikashi et al., 2022)</ref>. Research on lamins frequently involves the fusion of a genetically encoded fluorophore or epitope tag to the lamin protein to allow for detection in live cells and other assays. Lamins are sensitive to where the tag is placed within the protein sequence <ref type="bibr">(Herrmann et al., 2002)</ref>; C-terminal tags lead to obvious loss-of-function phenotypes, as the tag disrupts the lamin C-terminal CaaX motif that is important for proper posttranslational processing and localization <ref type="bibr">(Kreplak et al., 2008)</ref>, and the end of prelamin A is cleaved during processing into mature lamin A (hereafter referred to as LaA) <ref type="bibr">(Sinensky et al., 1994)</ref>.</p><p>Consequently, the vast majority of studies use N-terminal tags to label LaA. For example, N-terminally tagged lamins have been used to visualize the localization and dynamics of lamins in live cells throughout the cell cycle <ref type="bibr">(Broers et al., 1999)</ref>, study interactors of lamins <ref type="bibr">(Roux et al., 2012)</ref>, investigate autophagy <ref type="bibr">(Dou et al., 2015)</ref>, and serve as a marker of the nucleus in live cells and organisms <ref type="bibr">(Morin et al., 2001;</ref><ref type="bibr">Rizzo et al., 2009)</ref>.</p><p>In vivo studies using tagged lamins suggest that the presence of a tag can be detrimental for proper lamin assembly and function. In the nematode C. elegans, endogenous tagging of its lone lamin with GFP at the N-terminus causes mild or moderate fitness defects <ref type="bibr">(Bone et al., 2016;</ref><ref type="bibr">Gregory et al., 2023)</ref> and abnormal lamina assembly and stability <ref type="bibr">(Velez-Aguilera et al., 2020)</ref>. GFP-tagged lamins have also been associated with impaired function in Drosophila; endogenously tagged GFP-LamC marks the nuclear envelope (NE) as expected, but leads to bright nuclear granules <ref type="bibr">(Morin et al., 2001;</ref><ref type="bibr">Schulze et al., 2005)</ref> and abnormal chromatin patterns <ref type="bibr">(Gurudatta et al., 2010)</ref>, suggesting that the chimeric protein has compromised function. However, no systematic comparison of differently sized N-terminal tags on mammalian lamins has been performed to date, and many of the early studies using fluorescently tagged mammalian lamins involved overexpression on top of endogenous lamins, which might mask loss-of-function effects of the tag.</p><p>To address these knowledge gaps, we determined the effects of differently sized N-terminal tags on LaA function in a mammalian cell model, comparing the ability of untagged and tagged LaA constructs to rescue various LaA functions in lamin A/C-deficient (Lmna -/-) mouse embryo fibroblasts (MEFs). Specifically, we examined differences in the rescue potential of LaA with a small N-terminal tag (FLAG, 8 amino acids, 1 kDa) or a large N-terminal tag (enhanced GFP, 238 amino acids, 27 kDa) compared to untagged LaA and assessed the ability of these proteins to rescue nuclear morphology, deformability, rupture and disturbed localization of lamin-interacting proteins in Lmna -/-MEFs. Although tagged LaA restored some LaA functions, other functions were moderately or severely impaired by the addition of even a small tag, leading us to caution researchers about the use of tagged LaA proteins.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>RESULTS AND DISCUSSION</head><p>Lmna -/-MEFs are one of the best characterized systems used to study the function of LaA <ref type="bibr">(Chen et al., 2021;</ref><ref type="bibr">2018;</ref><ref type="bibr">Coffinier et al., 2010;</ref><ref type="bibr">Lammerding et al., 2006;</ref><ref type="bibr">2004;</ref><ref type="bibr">Odell et al., 2024;</ref><ref type="bibr">Sullivan et al., 1999;</ref><ref type="bibr">Zwerger et al., 2013)</ref>, and nuclear defects can be rescued by re-introduction of human LaA <ref type="bibr">(Lammerding et al., 2006;</ref><ref type="bibr">Odell et al., 2024;</ref><ref type="bibr">Wintner et al., 2020)</ref>. Thus, we genetically modified Lmna -/-MEFs to allow for doxycycline-inducible expression of untagged human LaA, FLAG [DYKDDDDK]-LaA, or GFP-LaA and then derived clonal populations with tunable LaA expression levels (Fig. <ref type="figure">1A</ref>,<ref type="figure">B</ref>). Precisely controlling the expression levels of the exogenously expressed lamin constructs is crucial for quantitative comparison, given that previous studies have shown that LaA expression levels directly correlate with nuclear stiffness <ref type="bibr">(Lammerding et al., 2006;</ref><ref type="bibr">Srivastava et al., 2021;</ref><ref type="bibr">Swift et al., 2013)</ref> and that severe overexpression of GFP-tagged lamins can cause aggregation and mislocalization <ref type="bibr">(Rizzo et al., 2009)</ref>. Note that we did not add any linker residues to the tags, that is FLAG or GFP sequences were added directly adjacent to the LaA sequence. We identified individual clones and specific doxycycline concentrations that yielded similar levels of LaA expression across the differently tagged constructs and that resulted in expression levels comparable to wild-type LaA in Lmna +/+ MEFs (Fig. <ref type="figure">1B-D</ref>).</p><p>Nuclear morphology and LaA distribution in cells expressing differently tagged LaA constructs All three LaA constructs localized to the nucleus and were enriched at the nuclear periphery as expected (Fig. <ref type="figure">2A</ref>). We previously showed that loss of lamin A/C results in abnormally shaped nuclei with decreased nuclear circularity <ref type="bibr">(Lammerding et al., 2006;</ref><ref type="bibr">Odell et al., 2024;</ref><ref type="bibr">Zwerger et al., 2013)</ref>. Expression of all three LaA constructs increased nuclear circularity in Lmna -/-MEFs (Fig. <ref type="figure">2B</ref>), indicating functional rescue. We did not detect any difference in the circularity of nuclei prior to inducing LaA expression, and all LaA constructs, regardless of the presence of a tag, showed similar efficacy in restoring nuclear shape to levels of wild-type cells (Fig. <ref type="figure">2B</ref>).</p><p>Impaired lamin filament assembly can result in altered intranuclear distribution, such as loss of LaA from the NE and an increase in nucleoplasmic LaA <ref type="bibr">(Manju et al., 2006;</ref><ref type="bibr">Wallace et al., 2023;</ref><ref type="bibr">Zwerger et al., 2015;</ref><ref type="bibr">2013)</ref>. To assess the effect of the different tags on intranuclear localization of LaA, we measured the intensity profiles of LaA across the nucleus following indirect immunofluorescence staining with an antibody recognizing an epitope present in all three LaA constructs (Fig. <ref type="figure">2C</ref>). The three LaA constructs were enriched at the nuclear periphery to similar extents, but both FLAG-LaA and GFP-LaA had increased nucleoplasmic localization compared to untagged LaA (Fig. <ref type="figure">2A</ref>,<ref type="figure">C</ref>,<ref type="figure">D</ref>). Furthermore, both FLAG-LaA and GFP-LaA were significantly more soluble than untagged LaA, based on extraction with different stringency buffers (Fig. <ref type="figure">2E</ref>,<ref type="figure">F</ref>). GFP-LaA also formed puncta in some nuclei, which might represent aggregations that resisted extraction by low stringency buffers (Fig. <ref type="figure">2G</ref>). These findings suggest that the addition of an N-terminal tag interferes with proper LaA assembly into the nuclear lamina, and are in agreement with previous studies, which reported defects in the assembly and/or localization when using GFP-tagged lamins <ref type="bibr">(Morin et al., 2001;</ref><ref type="bibr">Velez-Aguilera et al., 2020)</ref>.</p><p>N-terminal tags interfere with the ability of LaA to rescue nuclear stiffness</p><p>Lamins are an important contributor to nuclear deformability, and loss of lamin A/C leads to nuclei with decreased nuclear stiffness <ref type="bibr">(Davidson et al., 2019;</ref><ref type="bibr">Earle et al., 2020;</ref><ref type="bibr">Lammerding et al., 2006;</ref><ref type="bibr">Pajerowski et al., 2007;</ref><ref type="bibr">Wintner et al., 2020)</ref>. To assess the effect of different tags on the ability of LaA to rescue nuclear stiffness in Lmna -/-MEFs, we applied a high-throughput micropipette aspiration assay <ref type="bibr">(Davidson et al., 2019)</ref> to these cells, which imposes large deformations on the nucleus (Fig. <ref type="figure">3A</ref>,<ref type="figure">B</ref>). Whereas small nuclear deformations are predominantly resisted by chromatin, large nuclear deformations are primarily resisted by lamins <ref type="bibr">(Stephens et al., 2017)</ref>, making this assay ideally suited to measure the mechanical function of lamins. Without induction of exogenous LaA, all Lmna -/-clonal MEF lines had similar levels of nuclear deformability, and all Lmna -/-MEF lines had more deformable nuclei than wild-type cells (Fig. <ref type="figure">3A-D</ref>). All three LaA constructs were able to significantly reduce nuclear deformability compared to the non-induced controls (Fig. <ref type="figure">3A-D</ref>). However, only untagged LaA was able to restore nuclear deformability to wild-type levels (Fig. <ref type="figure">3D</ref>). Despite their difference in size, both the FLAG tag and the GFP tag resulted in similar levels of (partial) rescue. These results suggest that the addition of an Nterminal tag, even as small as a FLAG tag, inhibits the ability of LaA to regulate nuclear stiffness.</p><p>In addition to having more deformable nuclei, cells lacking lamin A/C have increased rates of NE rupture <ref type="bibr">(Cho et al., 2019;</ref><ref type="bibr">De Vos et al., 2011;</ref><ref type="bibr">Denais et al., 2016;</ref><ref type="bibr">Earle et al., 2020;</ref><ref type="bibr">Raab et al., 2016)</ref>. We examined the ability of the different LaA constructs to reduce the rate of spontaneous NE rupture in Lmna -/-MEFs using a fluorescent reporter for NE rupture consisting of cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS) fused to mCherry that accumulates at sites where nuclear DNA is exposed to the cytoplasm (Fig. <ref type="figure">3E</ref>) <ref type="bibr">(Denais et al., 2016;</ref><ref type="bibr">Raab et al., 2016)</ref>. Consistent with previous studies <ref type="bibr">(Denais et al., 2016;</ref><ref type="bibr">Odell et al., 2024;</ref><ref type="bibr">Raab et al., 2016)</ref>, we found that Lmna -/-MEFs had increased rates of spontaneous NE rupture compared to wild-type controls (Fig. <ref type="figure">3F</ref>). Expression of untagged LaA, FLAG-LaA and GFP-LaA all reduced the NE rupture rates in Lmna -/-MEFs (Fig. <ref type="figure">3F</ref>). Surprisingly, despite their different effects on nuclear deformability, all LaA constructs were able to restore NE rupture rates in Lmna -/-MEFs to levels of wild-type MEFs, suggesting that the addition of an N-terminal tag does not interfere with the ability of LaA to maintain nuclear membrane integrity.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>N-terminal tags interfere with ability of LaA to localize and interact with emerin</head><p>Emerin is a NE protein and a known LaA interactor that is retained at the inner nuclear membrane (INM) by lamin A/C <ref type="bibr">(Fernandez et al., 2022;</ref><ref type="bibr">Liddane and Holaska, 2021)</ref>. In Lmna -/-MEFs, emerin was mislocalized from the NE and primarily distributed to the cytoplasm (Fig. <ref type="figure">4A</ref>,<ref type="figure">B</ref>), consistent with previous reports <ref type="bibr">(Guo et al., 2014;</ref><ref type="bibr">Sullivan et al., 1999;</ref><ref type="bibr">Vaughan et al., 2001)</ref>. In the absence of exogenous LaA expression, all clonal Lmna -/-MEFs had similar levels of emerin mislocalization. Upon expression, all three LaA constructs increased the presence of emerin at the NE, but only the untagged LaA and the FLAG-LaA constructs fully restored normal localization of emerin (Fig. <ref type="figure">4B</ref>,<ref type="figure">C</ref>). These results suggest that the presence of the large N-terminal GFP tag interferes with proper association of LaA with emerin, whereas the smaller FLAG tag does not disturb this interaction. To determine whether the N-terminal GFP tag impaired in vitro binding between LaA and emerin, we performed co-immunoprecipitation (co-IP) analysis using lysates from each of the cell lines expressing different LaA constructs. Emerin co-immunoprecipitated with untagged LaA at much higher levels than with the FLAG-LaA or GFP-LaA constructs (Fig. <ref type="figure">4D</ref>,<ref type="figure">E</ref>). In contrast, co-IPs performed using a non-specific isotype matched control IgG did not yield any of the tagged lamin constructs nor emerin (Fig. <ref type="figure">S1</ref>). Despite FLAG-LaA being able to fully rescue nuclear emerin localization in cells, FLAG-LaA had a limiting effect on the interaction of LaA with emerin measured by co-IP. Notably, these orthogonal approaches probe for different abilities of LaA to bind emerin. In cells, emerin would be able to interact with fully assembled LaA filaments near the nuclear membranes, whereas in cell lysates, the NE is disrupted and the lamina is broken down by detergents and reducing agents. Thus, one explanation for the differing results obtained between the immunofluorescence and co-IP experiments is that both the FLAG  and GFP tags reduce LaA-emerin binding (as shown by the co-IP), but that the smaller FLAG tag does not inhibit the interaction between emerin and assembled filaments as severely as the GFP tag, thereby leading to improved nuclear localization of emerin in cells expressing FLAG-LaA compared to GFP-LaA. Nonetheless, our results suggest that the presence of the bulky N-terminal GFP tag interferes with the ability of LaA to interact with emerin when LaA is both assembled into the lamina and when the lamina is broken down.</p><p>Taken together, our studies indicate that N-terminal tags perturb some, but not other functions of LaA. FLAG-and GFP-tagged LaA were able to completely overcome loss of endogenous lamin A/C in restoring nuclear circularity and NE rupture assays. However, Nterminal tags impaired LaA localization, rescue of nuclear deformability and LaA interactions with emerin. We have previously shown that in induced pluripotent stem cell (iPSC)derived cardiomyocytes harboring laminopathic LaA mutations, mutant LaA was enriched in the nucleoplasm and led to reduced nuclear stiffness <ref type="bibr">(Wallace et al., 2023)</ref>, similar to the effects we describe here with FLAG-LaA and GFP-LaA. We propose that both mutant LaA proteins and tagged LaA constructs can alter proper assembly of lamins into higher order filaments. Structural studies have highlighted the importance of the head domain of lamin in the lateral assembly of lamin monomers into dimers, and the ultimate association into higher order filaments <ref type="bibr">(Heitlinger et al., 1992;</ref><ref type="bibr">Zhou et al., 2021)</ref>. By adding the highly charged FLAG tag or the globular GFP tag to the N-terminus of LaA, these motifs might interrupt the normal assembly dynamics of LaA, leading to an increased pool of unincorporated LaA. This in turn could result in a reduction in the number of filaments or altered filament and lamin network mechanics, leading to the defects observed in response to the nuclear deformability assay. Nonetheless, the networks formed by tagged lamins are sufficient to prevent NE rupture, which often occurs at sites where lamin B1 is locally depleted or that have defects in the local nuclear lamina organization <ref type="bibr">(Denais et al., 2016;</ref><ref type="bibr">Deviri et al., 2017;</ref><ref type="bibr">Pfeifer et al., 2022)</ref>. We have previously shown that tagged LaA can rescue the disturbed distribution of lamin B1 in Lmna -/-MEFs <ref type="bibr">(Odell et al., 2024)</ref>, supporting a mechanism where the expression of LaA in Lmna -/-MEFs improves the lamin B network, thereby reducing NE rupture.</p><p>The present study has several limitations. One limitation of the co-IP assay is that the antibody used for the co-IP experiments does not recognize endogenous mouse LaA to the same extent as the exogenous human LaA, and for this reason, data from wild-type cells are not included in Fig. <ref type="figure">4D</ref>,<ref type="figure">E</ref>. The Lmna -/-cells used in this study are known to express a residual truncated form of LaA <ref type="bibr">(Jahn et al., 2012;</ref><ref type="bibr">Kim et al., 2023)</ref>; however, our current and previous data <ref type="bibr">(Earle et al., 2020)</ref> demonstrate full rescue by human LaA, indicating that the fragment does not act in a dominant-negative manner. Additionally, we used anti-LaA antibodies that do not recognize this fragment to avoid confounding effects when assessing exogenous LaA levels and distribution. Finally, we tested only two specific, commonly used N-terminal tags (i.e. FLAG and GFP) on LaA rescue ability, and did not test the effect of inserting different linkers between the tags and LaA. This leaves open the possibility that use of linker residues that confer flexibility, or the use of other N-terminal tags, or internal tags might lead to less severe or no effects on lamin function.</p><p>In summary, our data indicate that even when some assays suggest normal function of the tagged protein, this does not exclude that other functions are affected by the addition of a tag, even for small tags. Therefore, non-tagged constructs should be included routinely as controls, and findings using tagged proteins should be confirmed using non-tagged versions of the protein whenever possible.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>MATERIALS AND METHODS</head></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Cell culture</head><p>Spontaneously immortalized wild-type and Lmna -/-MEFs were a kind gift from Colin Stewart, A*STAR, Singapore <ref type="bibr">(Sullivan et al., 1999)</ref> and were maintained in DMEM (Thermo Fisher Scientific, 11966025) supplemented with 10% FBS [Avantor (VWR), 89510-194] and 1% penicillinstreptomycin Thermo Fisher Scientific, 10378016. Cells were passaged at 80-90% confluency and routinely checked for mycoplasma contamination. For stable genetic manipulations, pseudovirus particles or the Piggybac transposase system were used as described previously <ref type="bibr">(Denais et al., 2016;</ref><ref type="bibr">Earle et al., 2020)</ref>. Antibiotic selection was performed using puromycin (InvivoGen) at 3 &#181;g/ml and blasticidin (InvivoGen) at 4.5 &#181;g/ml for at least 1 week. Clonal isolation was performed via serial dilution in a 96-well plate, followed by screening of putative clones by immunofluorescence for homogenous levels of protein expression. Doxycycline titrations were performed in 24-well plates using 1:2 serial dilutions.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Genetic construct information</head><p>The doxycycline-inducible FLAG-hLaA construct has been described previously <ref type="bibr">(Odell et al., 2024)</ref>. Untagged LaA was cloned via Gibson assembly following digestion of the pPB-rtTA-hCas9-puro-PB backbone <ref type="bibr">(Wang et al., 2017)</ref> with Nhe1 and Age1. Untagged human LaA was amplified from pCDH-CMV-hLamin_A-IRES-copGFP-EF1-puro <ref type="bibr">(Earle et al., 2020)</ref> using the PCR primers 5&#8242;-ACCCTCGTAAAGGTCTAGAGACCATGGA-GACCCCGTCC-3&#8242; and 5&#8242;-CCGTTTAAACTCATTACTAATTACATGATG-CTGCAGTTCTGG-3&#8242;. Enhanced GFP-LaA was cloned into the same backbone following PCR amplification using the PCR primers 5&#8242;-ACC-CTCGTAAAGGTCTAGAGACCATGGTGAGCAAGGGC-3&#8242; and 5&#8242;-CCG-TTTAAACTCATTACTAATTACATGATGCTGCAGTTCTGG-3&#8242;. Following cloning, all constructs were verified with Sanger sequencing of the inserts. The cGAS-mCherry reporter used in this study has been described previously <ref type="bibr">(Denais et al., 2016)</ref>. For Piggybac transposition, plasmids containing the desired insert were co-transfected with a plasmid encoding a hyperactive transposase (2:1 vector plasmid:hyperactive transposase plasmid) using the Purefection system according to the manufacturer's instructions.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Differential protein extraction</head><p>Cells (10 5 ) were seeded in wells of a six-well plate, and doxycycline was added at the appropriate concentration for 24 h to induce protein expression. To isolate the easily soluble fraction, cells were lysed using 200 &#181;l low-salt buffer (0.5&#215;PBS, 50 mM HEPES pH 8.0, 10 mM MgCl 2 , 1 mM EGTA and 0.2% NP-40 Alternative). Cells were lysed on ice for 5 min, then cells were scraped off the plate, transferred to 1.7 ml microcentrifuge tubes, and spun at 4&#176;C for 5 min at maximum speed (14,000 g for 5 min) in a benchtop centrifuge. The supernatant was saved as the 'soluble fraction'. The pellet was resuspended in 200 &#181;l high-salt RIPA buffer [12 mM sodium deoxycholate, 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 750 mM NaCl, 1% (v/v) NP-40 Alternative, 0.1% (v/v) SDS], vortexed for 5 min, sonicated (Branson 450 Digital Sonifier) for 30 s at 36% amplitude, boiled for 2 min, and centrifuged at 4&#176;C for 10 min at 14,000 g. The supernatant from this step was saved as the 'insoluble fraction'. Equal amounts of each fraction (20 &#181;l) were mixed with 5&#215;Laemmli buffer, boiled for 3 min and then separated by SDS-PAGE as described below.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Immunofluorescence</head><p>Cells were seeded on fibronectin-coated glass coverslips overnight, then doxycycline was added at the appropriate concentration for 24 h to induce protein expression. Fixation was performed with 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS for 15 min at room temperature, followed by three 5-min washes with IF wash buffer containing 0.2% Triton X-100, 0.25% Tween 20 and 0.3% BSA in PBS. Cells were blocked in 3% BSA in PBS for 1 h, then primary antibodies were added for 1 h in blocking buffer at room temperature or overnight at 4&#176;C. Primary antibodies used were: anti-LaA (Millipore MAB3540, 1:250) and anti-emerin (Leica Emerin-NCL, 1:1000). DAPI (Thermo Fisher Scientific, 62247) was added 1:1000 in PBS for 15 min. Secondary antibodies used were Alexa Fluor 488 or 568-conjugated donkey anti mouse or rabbit-IgG antibodies (Invitrogen) diluted 1:250 in 3% BSA in PBS. Coverslips were mounted on glass slides using Mowiol and kept in the dark until imaging.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Immunoblotting</head><p>Cells (10 5 ) were seeded in wells of six-well plates overnight, and then doxycycline was added at the appropriate concentration for 24 h to induce protein expression. Cells were lysed using a high salt RIPA buffer [12 mM sodium deoxycholate, 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 750 mM NaCl, 1% (v/v) NP-40 alternative and 0.1% (v/v) SDS in ultrapure water]. To extract LaA, lysates were vortexed for 5 min, sonicated (Branson 450 Digital Sonifier) for 30 s at 36% amplitude, boiled for 2 min, centrifuged at 4&#176;C for 10 min at 14,000 g and stored at -70&#176;C. Protein concentration was determined using a Bradford assay. Equal protein amounts were denatured in 5&#215; Laemmli buffer by boiling for 3 min, loaded onto 4-12% Bis-Tris gels (Invitrogen NP0322), run for 1.5 h at 100 V, then transferred for 1 h at 16 V onto PVDF membrane. Membranes were blocked for 1 h in blocking buffer containing 3% BSA in Tris-buffered saline plus 1% Tween 20. Primary antibodies used for Fig. <ref type="figure">1D</ref> were: rabbit anti-lamin A/C (Cell Signaling 2032S, 1:1000) and mouse anti-PCNA (Santa Cruz Biotechnology sc-56, 1:1000) antibodies. Primary antibodies used for Fig. <ref type="figure">4D</ref> were: mouse anti-LaA (Millipore MAB3540; 1:3000) and mouse anti-emerin (Leica NCL-Emerin; 1:1000) antibodies. Secondary antibodies used were: Licor IRDye 680RD donkey anti-mouse-IgG (926-68072; 1:5000) and Licor IRDye 800CW Donkey anti-Rabbit IgG (926-32213; 1:5000). Secondary antibodies were added for 1 h at room temperature in blocking buffer, followed by three 10-min washes. Membranes were imaged using the Odyssey Licor scanner, and then cropped and brightness and contrast was adjusted using Image Studio Lite (version 5.2) software. Uncropped versions of all blots are available in Fig. <ref type="figure">S2</ref>.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Immunoprecipitation</head><p>Co-IP studies were performed using the Pierce Protein A/G magnetic beads (Thermo Fisher Scientific 88802) according to the manufacturer's instructions. Briefly, whole-cell lysates were prepared as described above, except the boiling step was omitted to prevent denaturation. Lysates were incubated with anti-LaA antibody (Millipore MAB3540) at 1:100 overnight at 4&#176;C with gentle agitation. For control IPs, a non-specific IgG3 (Cell Signaling 37988) was used instead. Magnetic beads (25 &#181;l) were washed twice with lysis buffer, then beads were mixed with the lysates and complexes were allowed to form for 1 h at room temperature with gentle mixing. Bound antibody-antigen complexes were isolated using a magnetic separator, and samples were washed five times in IP wash buffer containing 50 mM Tris-HCl pH 8.0, 0.3 M NaCl and 0.3% Triton X-100. Samples were eluted using Laemmli buffer (Bio-Rad 1610737EDU) and boiled for 5 min to release bound proteins. The entire volume of eluted protein was loaded onto gels for SDS-PAGE as above, along with 4% lysate input that was set aside prior to addition of primary antibody. To compare the amount of emerin co-immunoprecipitated with different LaA constructs, we first quantified the intensity of the bands for the co-immunoprecipitated emerin, emerin in the IP input, and immunoprecipitated LaA. We then divided the levels of the co-immunoprecipitated emerin by the levels of emerin in the input. This fraction was then normalized to the levels of LaA immunoprecipitated in each condition.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Micropipette aspiration assay</head><p>Micropipette aspiration was performed according to a previously published protocol <ref type="bibr">(Davidson et al., 2019)</ref>. In brief, 1&#215;10 6 -3&#215;10 6 cells were suspended in 2% BSA in PBS supplemented with 0.2% FBS and 10 mM EDTA to prevent cell clumping or adherence. Hoechst 33342 was added at 1:1000 immediately before the cell suspension was transferred to the micropipette device. Cells were perfused into the device using the following pressure settings: inlet port (top), 1.0 psi; inlet port (bottom), 0.2 psi. Cells flow through the device and are trapped in the micropipette pockets because of the difference in pressure on the different regions of the device, allowing for aspiration of the nucleus into the small 'micropipette-like' aspiration channel. A small pressure gradient drives the perfusion of the cell suspension through the larger channel, with some of the cells becoming deposited in the 'pockets' that contain the smaller aspiration channels. Cells are gradually perfused, or at least partially aspirated, into these smaller aspiration channels, driven by a larger pressure gradient across these channels. Once a flow of cells was established in the device, cells were cleared from the pockets to allow new cells to enter, and images were acquired every 5 s for 40 frames. Nuclear protrusion length was measured using a MatLab script available at (<ref type="url">https://github.com/Lammerding/  MATLAB-micropipette_analysis</ref>).</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Microscopy</head><p>Confocal images were acquired on a Zeiss LSM900 series confocal microscope with airyscan module using a 40&#215; water immersion objective. The optimal z-slice size was automatically determined using Zen Blue (Zeiss) software. Airy units for images were set between 1.5 and 2.5. Micropipette aspiration data was acquired using an inverted Zeiss Observer Z1 epifluorescence microscope with Hamamatsu Orca Flash 4.0 camera. The image acquisition for micropipette aspiration experiments was automated with Zen Blue (Zeiss) software.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Image analysis</head><p>Nuclear circularity calculations were performed using a FIJI macro described in <ref type="bibr">Odell et al. (2024)</ref>. Briefly, this macro performs a background subtraction and thresholds the image based on the DAPI channel to identify nuclei, and then measures the circularity of each nucleus and mean intensity in each channel using the Analyze Particles function.</p><p>Intensity profile measurements were performed using a FIJI macro available on request. Briefly, this macro used the 'Plot Profile' feature in FIJI software to measure the LaA intensity across a line drawn across a z-slice through the center of the nucleus. To account for differences in nuclear size, the intensity profiles are converted into relative nuclear distances, as depicted in Fig. <ref type="figure">2B</ref>.</p><p>For measurements of nuclear-to-cytoplasmic ratios of emerin, nuclear emerin levels were measured using the same macro as the nuclear circularity calculations, and for each cell, cytoplasmic emerin levels were obtained by manually drawing a ROI adjacent to the corresponding nucleus for each cell. Then, mean nuclear emerin intensity was divided by mean cytoplasmic emerin intensity for each cell. NE rupture rates were determined based on the fraction of cells with nuclei positive for the NE reporter cGAS-mCherry, as described previously <ref type="bibr">(Denais et al., 2016;</ref><ref type="bibr">Odell et al., 2024)</ref>. Note that the cGAS-mCherry reporter contains two mutations (E225A/D227A) introduced into the cGAS catalytic domain that prevent interferon production and downstream immune signaling, while still allowing for the protein to bind DNA and localize at NE rupture sites <ref type="bibr">(Denais et al., 2016)</ref>. Briefly, cells were seeded on fibronectin-coated glass coverslips in wells of a 24-well plate, allowed to adhere overnight, and then LaA expression was induced for 24 h using doxycycline concentrations identified in Fig. <ref type="figure">1</ref>. Cells were fixed as above, and DNA was labeled using DAPI diluted 1:1000 in PBS. For counts of cGAS-mCherry-positive nuclei, image conditions were masked and nuclei were scored as 'cGAS positive' or 'cGAS negative' based on the presence or absence of mCherry puncta adjacent to each DAPI stained nucleus by a researcher unaware of the conditions. For all image analysis, cells on the edges of the image, dead cells or mitotic cells were excluded manually from the analysis.</p></div>
<div xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><head>Statistical analysis and figure generation</head><p>All analyses were performed using GraphPad Prism. For comparisons of more than three groups, one-way ANOVA with Tukey's multiple comparison test was performed on the replicate means. For all quantification of cell-level measurements (i.e.  <ref type="table">S1-S8</ref>.</p><p>Experiments were performed a minimum of three independent times, and for qualitative image analysis, observers were not aware of genotype or treatment conditions when scoring phenotypes. Our statistical analysis was developed in close consultation with the Cornell Statistical Consulting Unit. Figures were assembled using Adobe Illustrator.</p></div></body>
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