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Loss of an extensive ciliary connectome induces proteostasis and cell fate switching in a severe motile ciliopathy.


ABSTRACT: Motile cilia have essential cellular functions in development, reproduction, and homeostasis. Genetic causes for motile ciliopathies have been identified, but the consequences on cellular functions beyond impaired motility remain unknown. Variants in CCDC39 and CCDC40 cause severe disease not explained by loss of motility. Using human cells with pathological variants in these genes, Chlamydomonas genetics, cryo-electron microscopy, single cell RNA transcriptomics, and proteomics, we identified perturbations in multiple cilia-independent pathways. Absence of the axonemal CCDC39/CCDC40 heterodimer results in loss of a connectome of over 90 proteins. The undocked connectome activates cell quality control pathways, switches multiciliated cell fate, impairs microtubule architecture, and creates a defective periciliary barrier. Both cilia-dependent and independent defects are likely responsible for the disease severity. Our findings provide a foundation for reconsidering the broad cellular impact of pathologic variants in ciliopathies and suggest new directions for therapies.

SUBMITTER: Brody SL 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10983967 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Mar

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Loss of an extensive ciliary connectome induces proteostasis and cell fate switching in a severe motile ciliopathy.

Brody Steven L SL   Pan Jiehong J   Huang Tao T   Xu Jian J   Xu Huihui H   Koenitizer Jeffrey J   Brennan Steven K SK   Nanjundappa Rashmi R   Saba Thomas G TG   Berical Andrew A   Hawkins Finn J FJ   Wang Xiangli X   Zhang Rui R   Mahjoub Moe R MR   Horani Amjad A   Dutcher Susan K SK  

bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology 20240321


Motile cilia have essential cellular functions in development, reproduction, and homeostasis. Genetic causes for motile ciliopathies have been identified, but the consequences on cellular functions beyond impaired motility remain unknown. Variants in <i>CCDC39</i> and <i>CCDC40</i> cause severe disease not explained by loss of motility. Using human cells with pathological variants in these genes, <i>Chlamydomonas</i> genetics, cryo-electron microscopy, single cell RNA transcriptomics, and proteo  ...[more]

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