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TRRAP is a central regulator of human multiciliated cell formation.

Zhao WangLindsey W PlasschaertShivani AryalNicole A RenaudZinger Yang LoureiroRayman Choo-WingAngelica D PessottiNathaniel D KirkpatrickNadire R CochranWalter CarboneRob MaherAlicia LindemanCarsten RussJohn Reece-HoyesGregory McAllisterGregory R HoffmanGuglielmo RomaAron B Jaffe
Published in: The Journal of cell biology (2018)
The multiciliated cell (MCC) is an evolutionarily conserved cell type, which in vertebrates functions to promote directional fluid flow across epithelial tissues. In the conducting airway, MCCs are generated by basal stem/progenitor cells and act in concert with secretory cells to perform mucociliary clearance to expel pathogens from the lung. Studies in multiple systems, including Xenopus laevis epidermis, murine trachea, and zebrafish kidney, have uncovered a transcriptional network that regulates multiple steps of multiciliogenesis, ultimately leading to an MCC with hundreds of motile cilia extended from their apical surface, which beat in a coordinated fashion. Here, we used a pool-based short hairpin RNA screening approach and identified TRRAP, an essential component of multiple histone acetyltransferase complexes, as a central regulator of MCC formation. Using a combination of immunofluorescence, signaling pathway modulation, and genomic approaches, we show that (a) TRRAP acts downstream of the Notch2-mediated basal progenitor cell fate decision and upstream of Multicilin to control MCC differentiation; and (b) TRRAP binds to the promoters and regulates the expression of a network of genes involved in MCC differentiation and function, including several genes associated with human ciliopathies.
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