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The NEMP family supports metazoan fertility and nuclear envelope stiffness

Authors

  • Y. Tsatskis
  • R. Rosenfeld
  • J.D. Pearson
  • C. Boswell
  • Y. Qu
  • K. Kim
  • L. Fabian
  • A. Mohammad
  • X. Wang
  • M.I. Robson
  • K. Krchma
  • J. Wu
  • J. Gonçalves
  • D. Hodzic
  • S. Wu
  • D. Potter
  • L. Pelletier
  • W.H. Dunham
  • A.C. Gingras
  • Y. Sun
  • J. Meng
  • D. Godt
  • T. Schedl
  • B. Ciruna
  • K. Choi
  • J.R.B. Perry
  • R. Bremner
  • E.C. Schirmer
  • J.A. Brill
  • A. Jurisicova
  • H. McNeill

Journal

  • Science Advances

Citation

  • Sci Adv 6 (35): eabb4591

Abstract

  • Human genome-wide association studies have linked single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in NEMP1 (nuclear envelope membrane protein 1) with early menopause; however, it is unclear whether NEMP1 has any role in fertility. We show that whole-animal loss of NEMP1 homologs in Drosophila, Caenorhabditis elegans, zebrafish, and mice leads to sterility or early loss of fertility. Loss of Nemp leads to nuclear shaping defects, most prominently in the germ line. Biochemical, biophysical, and genetic studies reveal that NEMP proteins support the mechanical stiffness of the germline nuclear envelope via formation of a NEMP-EMERIN complex. These data indicate that the germline nuclear envelope has specialized mechanical properties and that NEMP proteins play essential and conserved roles in fertility.


DOI

doi:10.1126/sciadv.abb4591