Nuclear envelope proteins in cancer: revisiting the significance of LEM-domain proteins (opens in new tab)
Nuclear envelope dysfunction is increasingly recognized as a driver of cancer-associated alterations in chromatin organization, genome stability, and mechanotransduction. Among inner nuclear membrane components are the LEM-domain (LEM-D) proteins LAP2/TMPO, emerin (EMD), LEMD1, LEMD2, MAN1/LEMD3, ANKLE1, and ANKLE2. Accumulating evidence links dysregulation of these proteins to hallmark cancer processes, including cell-cycle control, epithelial–mesenchymal transition, genome instability, and ...
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