An Atat1/Mec-17-Myosin II axis controls ciliogenesis

<p>Primary cilia are evolutionarily conserved, acetylated microtubule-based organelles that transduce mechanical and chemical signals. Primary cilium assembly is tightly controlled and its deregulation causes a spectrum of human diseases. Formation of primary cilium is a collaborative effort o...

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Main Author: Rao, Yanhua
Other Authors: Yao, Tso-Pang
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10161/7224
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spelling ndltd-DUKE-oai-dukespace.lib.duke.edu-10161-72242014-05-09T03:34:19ZAn Atat1/Mec-17-Myosin II axis controls ciliogenesisRao, YanhuaCellular biologyActin RemodelingNon-muscle myosin IIPericentrosomal StructurePrimary CiliaTubulin Acetylation<p>Primary cilia are evolutionarily conserved, acetylated microtubule-based organelles that transduce mechanical and chemical signals. Primary cilium assembly is tightly controlled and its deregulation causes a spectrum of human diseases. Formation of primary cilium is a collaborative effort of multiple cellular machineries, including microtubule, actin network and membrane trafficking. How cells coordinate these components to construct the primary cilia remains unclear. In this dissertation research, we utilized a combination of cell biology, biochemistry and light microscopy technologies to tackle the enigma of primary cilia formation, with particular focus on isoform-specific roles of non-muscle myosin II family members. We found that myosin IIB (Myh10) is required for cilium formation. In contrast, myosin IIA (Myh9) suppresses cilium formation. In Myh10 deficient cells, Myh9 inactivation significantly restores cilia formation. Myh10 antagonizes Myh9 and increases actin dynamics, permitting pericentrosomal preciliary complex formation required for cilium assembly. Importantly, Myh10 is upregulated upon serum starvation-induced ciliogenesis and this induction requires Atat1/Mec-17, the microtubule acetyltransferase. Our findings suggest that Atat1/Mec17-mediated microtubule acetylation is coupled to Myh10 induction, whose accumulation overcomes the Myh9-dependent actin cytoskeleton, thereby activating cilium formation. Thus, Atat1/Mec17 and myosin II coordinate microtubules and the actin cytoskeleton to control primary cilium biogenesis.</p>DissertationYao, Tso-Pang2013Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/10161/7224
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic Cellular biology
Actin Remodeling
Non-muscle myosin II
Pericentrosomal Structure
Primary Cilia
Tubulin Acetylation
spellingShingle Cellular biology
Actin Remodeling
Non-muscle myosin II
Pericentrosomal Structure
Primary Cilia
Tubulin Acetylation
Rao, Yanhua
An Atat1/Mec-17-Myosin II axis controls ciliogenesis
description <p>Primary cilia are evolutionarily conserved, acetylated microtubule-based organelles that transduce mechanical and chemical signals. Primary cilium assembly is tightly controlled and its deregulation causes a spectrum of human diseases. Formation of primary cilium is a collaborative effort of multiple cellular machineries, including microtubule, actin network and membrane trafficking. How cells coordinate these components to construct the primary cilia remains unclear. In this dissertation research, we utilized a combination of cell biology, biochemistry and light microscopy technologies to tackle the enigma of primary cilia formation, with particular focus on isoform-specific roles of non-muscle myosin II family members. We found that myosin IIB (Myh10) is required for cilium formation. In contrast, myosin IIA (Myh9) suppresses cilium formation. In Myh10 deficient cells, Myh9 inactivation significantly restores cilia formation. Myh10 antagonizes Myh9 and increases actin dynamics, permitting pericentrosomal preciliary complex formation required for cilium assembly. Importantly, Myh10 is upregulated upon serum starvation-induced ciliogenesis and this induction requires Atat1/Mec-17, the microtubule acetyltransferase. Our findings suggest that Atat1/Mec17-mediated microtubule acetylation is coupled to Myh10 induction, whose accumulation overcomes the Myh9-dependent actin cytoskeleton, thereby activating cilium formation. Thus, Atat1/Mec17 and myosin II coordinate microtubules and the actin cytoskeleton to control primary cilium biogenesis.</p> === Dissertation
author2 Yao, Tso-Pang
author_facet Yao, Tso-Pang
Rao, Yanhua
author Rao, Yanhua
author_sort Rao, Yanhua
title An Atat1/Mec-17-Myosin II axis controls ciliogenesis
title_short An Atat1/Mec-17-Myosin II axis controls ciliogenesis
title_full An Atat1/Mec-17-Myosin II axis controls ciliogenesis
title_fullStr An Atat1/Mec-17-Myosin II axis controls ciliogenesis
title_full_unstemmed An Atat1/Mec-17-Myosin II axis controls ciliogenesis
title_sort atat1/mec-17-myosin ii axis controls ciliogenesis
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/10161/7224
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