SUMOylation is enriched in the nuclear matrix and required for chromosome segregation

  • Zhaosu Chen
  • , Jing Luo
  • , Yunpeng Zhang
  • , Shaoqi Zheng
  • , Huifang Zhang
  • , Yuanyong Huang
  • , Jiemin Wong*
  • , Jiwen Li
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

As an important posttranslational modification, SUMOylation plays critical roles in almost all biological processes. Although it has been well-documented that SUMOylated proteins are mainly localized in the nucleus and have roles in chromatin-related processes, we showed recently that the SUMOylation machinery is actually enriched in the nuclear matrix rather than chromatin. Here, we provide compelling biochemical, cellular imaging and proteomic evidence that SUMOylated proteins are highly enriched in the nuclear matrix. We demonstrated that inactivation of SUMOylation by inhibiting SUMO-activating E1 enzyme or KO of SUMO-conjugating E2 enzyme UBC9 have only mild effect on nuclear matrix composition, indicating that SUMOylation is neither required for nuclear matrix formation nor for targeting proteins to nuclear matrix. Further characterization of UBC9 KO cells revealed that loss of SUMOylation did not result in significant DNA damage, but led to mitotic arrest and chromosome missegregation. Altogether, our study demonstrates that SUMOylated proteins are selectively enriched in the nuclear matrix and suggests a role of nuclear matrix in mediating SUMOylation and its regulated biological processes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105547
JournalJournal of Biological Chemistry
Volume300
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2024

Keywords

  • SUMOylated proteins
  • SUMOylation
  • chromatin
  • histone deacetylation
  • nuclear matrix

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