FB2024_03 , released June 25, 2024
Reference Report
Open Close
Reference
Citation
Diggle, C.P., Moore, D.J., Mali, G., Zur Lage, P., Ait-Lounis, A., Schmidts, M., Shoemark, A., Garcia Munoz, A., Halachev, M.R., Gautier, P., Yeyati, P.L., Bonthron, D.T., Carr, I.M., Hayward, B., Markham, A.F., Hope, J.E., von Kriegsheim, A., Mitchison, H.M., Jackson, I.J., Durand, B., Reith, W., Sheridan, E., Jarman, A.P., Mill, P. (2014). HEATR2 Plays a Conserved Role in Assembly of the Ciliary Motile Apparatus.  PLoS Genet. 10(9): e1004577.
FlyBase ID
FBrf0226276
Publication Type
Research paper
Abstract
Cilia are highly conserved microtubule-based structures that perform a variety of sensory and motility functions during development and adult homeostasis. In humans, defects specifically affecting motile cilia lead to chronic airway infections, infertility and laterality defects in the genetically heterogeneous disorder Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia (PCD). Using the comparatively simple Drosophila system, in which mechanosensory neurons possess modified motile cilia, we employed a recently elucidated cilia transcriptional RFX-FOX code to identify novel PCD candidate genes. Here, we report characterization of CG31320/HEATR2, which plays a conserved critical role in forming the axonemal dynein arms required for ciliary motility in both flies and humans. Inner and outer arm dyneins are absent from axonemes of CG31320 mutant flies and from PCD individuals with a novel splice-acceptor HEATR2 mutation. Functional conservation of closely arranged RFX-FOX binding sites upstream of HEATR2 orthologues may drive higher cytoplasmic expression of HEATR2 during early motile ciliogenesis. Immunoprecipitation reveals HEATR2 interacts with DNAI2, but not HSP70 or HSP90, distinguishing it from the client/chaperone functions described for other cytoplasmic proteins required for dynein arm assembly such as DNAAF1-4. These data implicate CG31320/HEATR2 in a growing intracellular pre-assembly and transport network that is necessary to deliver functional dynein machinery to the ciliary compartment for integration into the motile axoneme.
PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
PMC4168999 (PMC) (EuropePMC)
Associated Information
Comments
Associated Files
Other Information
Secondary IDs
    Language of Publication
    English
    Additional Languages of Abstract
    Parent Publication
    Publication Type
    Journal
    Abbreviation
    PLoS Genet.
    Title
    PLoS Genetics
    Publication Year
    2005-
    ISBN/ISSN
    1553-7404 1553-7390
    Data From Reference
    Aberrations (1)
    Alleles (9)
    Genes (6)
    Human Disease Models (1)
    Sequence Features (2)
    Natural transposons (1)
    Insertions (2)
    Experimental Tools (1)
    Transgenic Constructs (5)