Nuclear enveloperemodeling events as models to assess the potential Biology Diagrams The nuclear envelope is a dynamic structure that is disassembled and reassembled during 'open' mitosis in higher eukaryotes. These mitotic changes are subject to both spatial and temporal control

Breakdown and reformation of the nuclear envelope (NE) during cell division is one of the most dramatic structural and functional changes in higher eukaryotic cells. NE breakdown (NEBD) marks a highly regulated switch in chromosome confinement by membranes in interphase to microtubules in M-phase. The boundary of interphase nuclei has a rigid and highly interconnected architecture made up of a During telophase, the nuclear envelope (NE) reforms around daughter nuclei to ensure proper segregation of nuclear and cytoplasmic contents[-] . NE reformation requires the coating of chromatin by membrane derived from the Endoplasmic Reticulum and a

III controls nuclear envelope reformation Biology Diagrams
The nuclear envelope is more than a static barrier between the nuclear and cytoplasmic compartments. It is very dynamic and undergoes extensive remodelling in response to mechanical challenges as During cell division, remodeling of the nuclear envelope (NE) enables chromosome segregation by the mitotic spindle[] . The reformation of sealed nuclei requires Endosomal Sorting Complexes Required for Transport (ESCRTs) and LEM2, a transmembrane ESCRT

This envelope and the nuclear pores within it play a critical role in separating the genome from the cytoplasm. It also presents cells with a challenge. How are cells to remodel the nuclear compartment boundary during mitosis without compromising nuclear function?

Nuclear envelope remodelling during mitosis Biology Diagrams
The ESCRT-III complex is implicated in the reformation of the nuclear envelope; the CHMP2A component of ESCRT-III is directed to the forming nuclear envelope through classical ESCRT-assembly