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The small GTPase RSG1 controls a final step in primary cilia initiation

Authors :
Aimin Liu
Stephanie O. Agbu
Kathryn V. Anderson
Yinwen Liang
Source :
The Journal of Cell Biology
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2017.

Abstract

Primary cilia are essential for normal development and tissue homeostasis, but the mechanisms that remodel the centriole to promote cilia initiation are not well understood. Agbu et al. report that mouse RSG1, a small GTPase, regulates a late step in cilia initiation, downstream of TTBK2 and the CPLANE protein INTU.<br />Primary cilia, which are essential for normal development and tissue homeostasis, are extensions of the mother centriole, but the mechanisms that remodel the centriole to promote cilia initiation are poorly understood. Here we show that mouse embryos that lack the small guanosine triphosphatase RSG1 die at embryonic day 12.5, with developmental abnormalities characteristic of decreased cilia-dependent Hedgehog signaling. Rsg1 mutant embryos have fewer primary cilia than wild-type embryos, but the cilia that form are of normal length and traffic Hedgehog pathway proteins within the cilium correctly. Rsg1 mother centrioles recruit proteins required for cilia initiation and dock onto ciliary vesicles, but axonemal microtubules fail to elongate normally. RSG1 localizes to the mother centriole in a process that depends on tau tubulin kinase 2 (TTBK2), the CPLANE complex protein Inturned (INTU), and its own GTPase activity. The data suggest a specific role for RSG1 in the final maturation of the mother centriole and ciliary vesicle that allows extension of the ciliary axoneme.

Details

ISSN :
15408140 and 00219525
Volume :
217
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cell Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....68a223b38a72a20f9ee6b0036f560e2d