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Ciliopathy-associated gene Cc2d2a promotes assembly of subdistal appendages on the mother centriole during cilia biogenesis.

Shobi VeleriSouparnika H ManjunathRobert N FarissHelen May-SimeraMatthew BrooksTrevor A FoskettChun GaoTeresa A LongoPinghu LiuKunio NagashimaRivka A RachelTiansen LiAnand SwaroopAnand Swaroop
Published in: Nature communications (2014)
The primary cilium originates from the mother centriole and participates in critical functions during organogenesis. Defects in cilia biogenesis or function lead to pleiotropic phenotypes. Mutations in centrosome-cilia gene CC2D2A result in Meckel and Joubert syndromes. Here we generate a Cc2d2a(-/-) mouse that recapitulates features of Meckel syndrome including embryonic lethality and multiorgan defects. Cilia are absent in Cc2d2a(-/-) embryonic node and other somatic tissues; disruption of cilia-dependent Shh signalling appears to underlie exencephaly in mutant embryos. The Cc2d2a(-/-) mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs) lack cilia, although mother centrioles and pericentriolar proteins are detected. Odf2, associated with subdistal appendages, is absent and ninein is reduced in mutant MEFs. In Cc2d2a(-/-) MEFs, subdistal appendages are lacking or abnormal by transmission electron microscopy. Consistent with this, CC2D2A localizes to subdistal appendages by immuno-EM in wild-type cells. We conclude that CC2D2A is essential for the assembly of subdistal appendages, which anchor cytoplasmic microtubules and prime the mother centriole for axoneme biogenesis.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • genome wide
  • gene expression
  • induced apoptosis
  • lymph node
  • dna methylation
  • oxidative stress
  • endoplasmic reticulum stress