Cell-type specific and environmentally-responsive plasticity in nuclear pore complex (NPC) composition and structure is an emerging area of investigation, but its molecular underpinnings remain ill defined. To understand the cause and consequence of NPC plasticity requires technologies to visualize differences within individual NPCs across the thousands in a given nucleus. We evaluate the utility of Pan Expansion Microscopy (Pan-ExM), which enables 16-20 fold isotropic cell enlargement while preserving the proteome, to reveal NPC plasticity. NPCs are robustly identified by deep learning-facilitated segmentation as tripartite structures corresponding to the nucleoplasmic ring, inner ring with central transport channel, and cytoplasmic ring, as confirmed by immunostaining. We demonstrate a range of NPC diameters with a bias for dilated NPCs at the basal nuclear surface, often in local clusters. These diameter biases are eliminated by disrupting linker of nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton (LINC) complex-dependent connections between the nuclear envelope (NE) and the cytoskeleton, supporting that they reflect local variations in NE tension. Pan-ExM further reveals that the transmembrane nucleoporin/nup POM121 resides specifically at the nuclear ring in multiple model cell lines, surprising given the expectation that it would be a component of the inner ring like other transmembrane nups. Remarkably, however, POM121 shifts from the nuclear ring to the inner ring specifically in aged induced pluripotent stem cell derived neurons (iPSNs) from a patient with C9orf72 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Thus, Pan-ExM allows the visualization of changes in NPC architecture that may underlie early steps in an ALS pathomechanism. Taken together, Pan-ExM is a powerful and accessible tool to visualize NPC plasticity in physiological and pathological contexts at single NPC resolution.
Read full abstract