PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATION

2026

The Nemp1–Nesprin complex mediates cellular responses to matrix mechanics

Ganguly A, Zmuda H, et al.

PNAS

The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Washington University - St. Louis

RESEARCH SUMMARY
This study identifies Nuclear Envelope Membrane Protein 1 (NEMP1) as a key nuclear-mechanotransduction component required for cell survival under mechanically stressful conditions. In vivo, the authors show that oocyte loss and infertility in Nemp1 knockout mice are driven by the stiff, collagen-rich ovarian cortex: reducing ovarian stiffness via Lox haploinsufficiency partially rescues primordial follicle survival and restores fertility. In vitro, NEMP1-depleted cells undergo apoptosis on stiff substrates but remain viable on soft substrates, demonstrating a stiffness-dependent survival requirement. Mechanistically, NEMP1 is required for mechanosensitive YAP nuclear localization: NEMP1 loss reduces YAP nuclear translocation on stiff matrices and after mechanical stretching, and constitutively nuclear YAP (YAP5SA) rescues cell viability. NEMP1 deficiency disrupts actin organization and lowers actin coherence; pharmacologic actin polymerization partially restores YAP nuclear localization, placing cytoskeletal integrity downstream of NEMP1 in this pathway. Finally, the authors demonstrate that NEMP1 forms a complex with the KASH domain of NESPRINs (e.g., NESPRIN2) independently of SUN1/2, defining a SUN-independent nuclear–cytoskeletal linkage (“Nemp1–Nesprin complex”) that operates in parallel to the canonical LINC complex to support actin-dependent mechanotransduction and cell survival on stiff environments.

CELLSCALE INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture FX

Mechanical stretching experiments were performed using a CellScale MechanoCulture FX system to apply controlled uniaxial strain to adherent mouse lung fibroblasts as a defined mechanical challenge for mechanotransduction assays. Cells were seeded into CellScale 16-well silicone plates (MCFX-424) that were surface-treated with polydopamine and coated with gelatin to support attachment. The silicone plates were mounted into the MechanoCulture FX device and statically stretched by 1,552.9 µm for defined durations (0, 30, 60, 90, or 120 minutes) under standard incubation conditions. After stretching, cultures were rinsed and fixed for immunofluorescence to quantify mechanosensitive responses—most notably YAP nuclear localization and actin cytoskeletal organization (phalloidin staining). These MechanoCulture FX–enabled stretch assays were central to demonstrating that NEMP1 is required for stretch-induced YAP nuclear translocation and for maintaining actin organization under mechanical stress.
AUTHORS

Abira Ganguly, Hannah Zmuda, Javier Abello, Danielle Illy, Christopher Walter, Yonit Tsatskis, Nattapon Thanintorn, Ying Zhang, Bilal Ahmad Hakim, Didier Hodzic, Amber N. Stratman, Andrea Jurisicova, Amit Pathak, Helen McNeill.

PUBLICATION DETAILS
JOURNAL

PNAS

YEAR

2026

INSTITUTIONS

The Hospital for Sick Children, University of Toronto, Washington University - St. Louis

COUNTRIES

Canada, United States

INSTRUMENT USED

MechanoCulture FX

TESTING METHODS

Tensile Testing

RESEARCH APPLICATIONS

MechanotransductionPelvic Floor and Gynecological Biomechanics

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