| Literature DB >> 23352055 |
Katarzyna Szymanska1, Colin A Johnson.
Abstract
Recent studies of the primary cilium have begun to provide further insights into ciliary ultrastructure, with an emerging picture of complex compartmentalization and molecular components that combine in functional modules. Many proteins that are mutated in ciliopathies are localized to the transition zone, a compartment of the proximal region of the cilium. The loss of these components can disrupt ciliary functions such as the control of protein entry and exit from the cilium, the possible trafficking of essential ciliary components, and the regulation of signaling cascades and control of the cell cycle. The discovery of functional modules within the primary cilium may help in understanding the variable phenotypes and pleiotropy in ciliopathies.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23352055 PMCID: PMC3555838 DOI: 10.1186/2046-2530-1-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cilia ISSN: 2046-2530
Figure 1This figure shows schematic representation of cilia ultrastructure with cross-sections at the level of the basal body, transition fibers, transition zone and axoneme in motile and non-motile cilia. On the left hand side, is an enlarged immunofluorescence micrograph of a single primary cilium on an IMCD3 epithelial cell immunostained for the cilia marker acetylated α-tubulin (blue), the basal body marker γ-tubulin (red), and transmembrane protein (TMEM) 216 (green) which localizes to the transition zone. Scale bar = 1 μm.
Figure 2Localization of the indicated proteins (coloured ovals) to sub-ciliary compartments (pale blue, axoneme; grey, inversin compartment; pink, transition zone; dark blue, basal body; grey with dashed square , centriolar satellites) are represented based on biochemical and genetic interaction data from four recent studies of the composition of the transition zone (Sang 2011,Garcia-Gonzalo 2011,Williams 2011 and Huang 2011; each indicated at the top of each section). White text indicates common components identified by different studies; dark lines indicate an interaction identified by MS/MS; a dashed line indicates a genetic interaction; overlapping ellipses indicated a direct interaction. The model system(s) used to generate these data are also indicated for each study.
List of proteins localized to the transition zone involved in ciliopathies
| TZ | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011; Williams et al, 2011 | MKS | |
| | BB | Sang et al, 2011 | MKS |
| AX | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS | |
| | TZ | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011; Huang et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS |
| | BB | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS |
| AX | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS, NPHP | |
| | TZ | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011; Williams et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS, NPHP |
| TZ | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS, NPHP, BBS, LCA, SLS | |
| | BB | Sang et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS, NPHP, BBS, LCA, SLS |
| | CS | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS, NPHP, BBS, LCA, SLS |
| TZ | Sang et al, 2011; Williams et al, 2011; Huang et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS, NPHP, LCA | |
| | BB | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS, NPHP, LCA |
| TZ | Williams et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS | |
| | BB | Sang et al, 2011 | MKS, JBTS |
| AX | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011 | MKS | |
| | TZ | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011 | MKS |
| | BB | Sang et al, 2011 | MKS |
| TZ | Sang et al, 2011; Williams et al, 2011 | JBTS, NPHP, SLS | |
| TZ | Sang et al, 2011; Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011; Williams et al, 2011; Huang et al, 2011 | NPHP, SLS | |
| TZ | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011; Williams et al, 2011; Huang et al, 2011 | MKS | |
| BB | Garcia-Gonzalo et al, 2011 | MKS |
The proteins are described to localize to the transition zone and other ciliary compartments in recent publications. Abbreviations: AX, Axoneme; BB, Basal body; BBS, Bardet-Biedl syndrome; CS, Centriolar satellites; JBTS, Joubert syndrome; LCA, Leber congenital amaurosis; MKS, Meckel-Gruber syndrome; NPHP, nephronophthisis; SLS, Senior-Løken syndrome; TZ, transition zone.
Figure 3Five ciliopathies with extensive genetic heterogeneity and pleiotropy (BBS, Bardet-Biedl syndrome; JBTS, Joubert syndrome; MKS, Meckel-Gruber syndrome; NPHP, nephronophthisis; SLS, Senior-Løken syndrome) are indicated by ovals of different colour, with the ciliary proteins mutated as a known cause of each disorder indicated by the coloured lines.