| Literature DB >> 35006274 |
Bryony Braschi1, Heymut Omran2, George B Witman3, Gregory J Pazour4, K Kevin Pfister5, Elspeth A Bruford1,6, Stephen M King7.
Abstract
Dyneins are highly complex, multicomponent, microtubule-based molecular motors. These enzymes are responsible for numerous motile behaviors in cytoplasm, mediate retrograde intraflagellar transport (IFT), and power ciliary and flagellar motility. Variants in multiple genes encoding dyneins, outer dynein arm (ODA) docking complex subunits, and cytoplasmic factors involved in axonemal dynein preassembly (DNAAFs) are associated with human ciliopathies and are of clinical interest. Therefore, clear communication within this field is particularly important. Standardizing gene nomenclature, and basing it on orthology where possible, facilitates discussion and genetic comparison across species. Here, we discuss how the human gene nomenclature for dyneins, ODA docking complex subunits, and DNAAFs has been updated to be more functionally informative and consistent with that of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, a key model organism for studying dyneins and ciliary function. We also detail additional nomenclature updates for vertebrate-specific genes that encode dynein chains and other proteins involved in dynein complex assembly.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35006274 PMCID: PMC8754002 DOI: 10.1083/jcb.202109014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Biol ISSN: 0021-9525 Impact factor: 8.077
Figure 1.Cytoplasmic dynein complexes. (a) The cytoplasmic dynein 1 complex. The DYNC1H1 protein heavy chains have large globular heads at the C-termini that are composed of a ring of six AAA+ domains. The microtubule-binding domains are located at the tips of antiparallel coiled coils that derive from AAA4. The linker/N-terminal domains connect the AAA rings and the intermediate and light chains. (b) The cytoplasmic dynein 2 complex. The DYNC2H1 protein heavy chains power retrograde IFT and have the same general domain organization as DYNC1H1. However, the tails of the two heavy chains fold differently due to an asymmetry imposed by the two different intermediate chains: one is straight while the other forms a zigzag shape and interacts with the IFT-B train (Toropova et al., 2019). The linker/N-terminal domain connects the AAA ring and the intermediate and light chains. *It remains unknown whether the DYNLT2B protein forms a homodimer or a heterodimer with another Tctex-type light chain. (c) Schematic showing the interaction between the dynein 1 and dynactin complexes. The adapter molecule affects the type of cargo bound; in this figure, the hook microtubule tethering protein 3 (HOOK3)–encoded protein is acting as a cargo adapter.
Figure 2.Axonemal dynein complexes. (a) Axonemal ODA. The blue text denotes subunits found in ODA complexes in respiratory cilia, and red text denotes subunits found in ODA complexes in sperm flagella. (b) Axonemal inner arm I1/f complex subunits (IDA). (c) Monomeric IDAs. Each inner arm species is constructed around a distinct monomeric heavy chain associated with an actin monomer and either DNALI1 or centrin; species d contains two additional components. In most cases, the precise equivalence between the human and C. reinhardtii monomeric heavy chain species is uncertain.
Figure 3.Organization of a mammalian motile cilium. (a) The diagram illustrates the general 9 + 2 microtubule arrangement within the ciliary axoneme. The inner and outer rows of dynein arms generate the force required for ciliary beating. The N-DRC complex is a key regulatory structure that interconnects the doublet microtubules. The radial spokes regulate the beat of cilia by transducing signals between the doublets and the central microtubule pair. (b) Tomographic image of an averaged 96-nm repeat for a single human ciliary doublet microtubule, revealing the microtubule-associated dynein arms, N-DRC, and radial spoke. The scale bar represents 25 nm. This image was generated by Jason Schrad (Nicastro laboratory) using data from Lin et al. (2014). (c and d) Cross-section (c) and longitudinal (d) views of the 48-nm repeat organization of a bovine doublet microtubule. The components of the ODA-DC are individually colored and indicated. This ribbon diagram was generated with the PyMol molecular graphics system (Schrödinger) using Protein Data Bank accession no. 7RRO (Gui et al., 2021).
Human phenotypes associated with variants of genes encoding dyneins and dynein-associated proteins
| Phenotype | Associated dynein or dynein-related gene variants | Selected associated publications (PubMed ID) | OMIM MIM number (phenotype subtype) |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 11371505 20301301 24360805 | 617577 (CILD37) | |
|
| 11062149 11788826 | 608644 (CILD3) | |
|
| 30471717 30471718 | 618300 (CILD40) | |
|
| 12142464 | 611884 (CILD7) | |
|
| 10577904 | 604366 (CILD1) | |
|
| 18950741 | 612444 (CILD9) | |
|
| 21496787 | 614017 (CILD16) | |
| 17360648 | 610852 (CILD6) | ||
|
| 23261302 23261303 23506398 30291279 32855706 | 615067 (CILD20) | |
|
| 23849778 24203976 25186273 | 615451 (CILD23) | |
|
| 24067530 25192045 25224326 30504913 31383820 | 616037 (CILD30) | |
|
| 27486780 | 617092 (CILD35) | |
|
| 19944400 19944405 27261005 | 613193 (CILD13) | |
|
| 31107948 32638265 34785929 | 612518 (CILD10) | |
|
| 22387996 31186518 | 606763 (CILD2) | |
|
| 23872636 | 615482 (CILD25) | |
|
| 29358401 25232951 23040496 | 614874 (CILD18) | |
|
| 32170493 | 300991 (CILD36) | |
|
| 23604077 23891469 23891471 | 615444 (CILD22) | |
|
| 23122589 | 614935 (CILD19) | |
|
| 30388400 | 618254 (CILD39) | |
|
| 24055112 26228299 | 615505 (CILD28) | |
|
| 24094744 | 615500 (CILD26) | |
|
| 29727692 29727693 | 618063 (CILD38) | |
|
| 24307404 25609763 32788638 | 158600 (SMALED) | |
|
| 26998597 29353221 32709491 | 615290 (SMALED2A) 618291 (SMALED2B) | |
|
| 24307404 20697106 22459677 22847149 33242470 | 614228 (CMT2O) | |
|
| 26517670 | Not listed in OMIM | |
|
| 19442771 26874042 27925158 31935347 | 613091 (SRTD3) | |
|
| 23910462 26874042 29271569 | 615503 (SRTD8) | |
|
| 24183449 24183451 | 615633 (SRTD11) | |
|
| 26130459 | 617088 (SRTD15) | |
|
| 25830415 26044572 28475963 | 617405 (SRTD17) | |
|
|
| 32753734 | Not listed in OMIM |
|
|
| 33124039 | Not listed in OMIM |
|
|
| 31079899 | 618492 (NEDMIBA) |
|
| 25098561 | 616059 (MRMV3) | |
|
|
| 23603762 22368300 | 614563 (MRD13) |
|
|
| 24360805 33989052 | 617576 (SPGF18) |
|
| 30811583 | 619094 (SPGF45) | |
|
| 32619401 | 619095 (SPGF46) | |
|
| 31178125 31658987 31841227 | 618643 (SPGF39) | |
|
| 32692650 20301752 32341547 28886386 | 601545 (LIS) | |
|
| 27053665 22933543 | 614851 (SCKL7) |
Note that for some of these phenotypes, there are several variants with varying degrees of severity, and different genes may be associated with different types of these genetic conditions.
Summary table of nomenclature updates reported here
| Approved HGNC Symbol | Name | Aliases (previously approved symbols in bold) | Protein present in | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Dynein light chain Tctex-type 2 | Axonemal ODA complex | ||
|
| Outer dynein arm docking complex subunit 1 | Axonemal ODA complex | ||
|
| Outer dynein arm docking complex subunit 2 | No orthologue | Axonemal ODA complex | |
|
| Outer dynein arm docking complex subunit 3 | Axonemal ODA complex | ||
|
| Outer dynein arm docking complex subunit 4 | No orthologue | Axonemal ODA complex | |
|
| Dynein axonemal intermediate chain 3 | Axonemal IDA I1/f complex | ||
|
| Dynein axonemal intermediate chain 4 | Axonemal IDA I1/f complex | ||
|
| Dynein axonemal intermediate chain 7 | Axonemal IDA I1/f complex | ||
|
| Dynein light chain Tctex-type 2B | Axonemal IDA I1/f complex | ||
| Cytoplasmic dynein 2 complex | ||||
|
| Dynein 2 intermediate chain 1 | Cytoplasmic dynein 2 complex | ||
|
| Dynein 2 intermediate chain 2 | Cytoplasmic dynein 2 complex | ||
|
| Dynein light chain Tctex-type 3 | Cytoplasmic dynein 2 complex | ||
|
| Dynein axonemal assembly factor 8 | Axonemal dynein assembly factor | ||
|
| Dynein axonemal assembly factor 9 |
| Axonemal dynein assembly factor | |
|
| Dynein axonemal assembly factor 10 |
| Axonemal dynein assembly factor | |
|
| Dynein axonemal assembly factor 11 | Axonemal dynein assembly factor | ||
|
| Leucine rich repeat containing 56 | DNAAF12, FLJ00101, DKFZp761L1518 | Axonemal dynein assembly factor | |
|
| Sperm associated antigen 1 | DNAAF13, SP75, FLJ32920, HSD-3.8, TPIS, CT140, CILD28, | Axonemal dynein assembly factor | |
|
| PIH1 domain containing 1 | DNAAF14, FLJ20643, Pih1, MOT48, | Axonemal dynein assembly factor | |
|
| PIH1 domain containing 2 | DNAAF15 | Axonemal dynein assembly factor | |
|
| Cilia and flagella associated protein 298 | FLJ20467, DAB2, FBB18, CILD26, Kur, C21orf48, C21orf59, DNAAF16 |
| Axonemal dynein assembly factor |
|
| Coiled-coil domain containing 103 | FLJ13094, FLJ34211, PR46b, CILD17, DNAAF17 |
| Axonemal dynein assembly factor |
|
| Dynein assembly factor with WD repeats 1 | FLJ25955, ODA16, WDR69, DNAAF18 |
| Axonemal dynein assembly factor |
Information about C. reinhardtii ciliary proteins, including dynein components, is curated and available at http://chlamyfp.org/.
Chlamydomonas encodes two paralogous proteins that both have the same human orthologue.
Reserved symbol/alias symbol. This gene will either be updated as a DNAAF or a DNAAF symbol will be added as an alias if further future publications support this.
Figure 4.Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree to show the relationship of Tctex-type dynein light chains in selected species. This tree is shown with a midpoint rooting. The figures on the nodes show the Shimodaira–Hasegawa likelihood ratio test and the Ultrafast bootstrap support values for the branches (SH-aLRT %/UFBoot %). Bootstrap values of ≥70% only are shown. The scale bar represents the expected number of amino acid substitutions per site. M. musculus has multiple Dynlt1 and Dynlt2 paralogs, but as these are identical at the amino acid level, only one sequence has been included in each case. The colors highlight supported clades: green for DYNLT1 and DYNLT3 and their orthologues, blue for DYNLT2 and its orthologues, red for DYNLT2B and its orthologues, yellow for DYNLT4 and its orthologue, and purple for DYNLT5 and its orthologues.