A team of researchers from Penn State University and the University
of California has discovered a protein that is required for the growth
of tiny, but critical, hair-like structures called cilia on cell
surfaces. The discovery has important implications for human health
because lack of cilia can lead to serious diseases such as polycystic
kidney disease, blindness and neurological disorders. "If we want to
better understand and treat diseases related to cilium development, we
need to identify important regulators of cilium growth and learn how
those regulators function," said co-author Aimin Liu, associate
professor of biology at Penn State. "This work gives us significant
insight into one of the earliest steps in cilium formation."
Ar- Raniry Islamic University |
The researchers describe their findings in a paper that will be published online in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
during the week of 27 January 2014. In addition to Liu, authors include
Penn State cellular biologists Xuan Ye, Huiqing Zeng and Gang Ning, as
well as Jeremy F. Reiter, a biophysicist at the University of California
-- San Francisco.
Cilia, which are present on the surface of almost all mammalian
cells, are responsible for sending, receiving, and processing
information within the body. "You could think of cilia as the cells'
antennae," Liu said. "Without cilia, the cells can't sense what's going
on around them, and they can't communicate." Cilia also perform
important filtering and cleansing functions. For example, cilia inside
the trachea, or windpipe, trap and prevent bacteria from entering the
lungs.
In a previous study, Liu and his colleagues learned that a protein
called C2cd3 is important for cilium formation because mice that lacked
this protein exhibited severe developmental problems typically
associated with the lack of cilia. "At the time we knew only that if we
get rid of the protein, the cells in the animal would not grow cilia,"
Liu said. "We didn't understand why, but now we do."
A cilium grows from a centriole, a structure that clings to the inner
surface of the cell and serves as an anchor for the cilium. Before a
cell can grow a cilium, it needs to assemble a set of appendages at one
end of the centriole. These appendages can then connect the centriole to
the cell surface, allowing the outgrowth of a cilium. Just how these
appendages are assembled, though, remained a mystery for more than four
decades since their discovery in 1962. Liu and his colleagues found that
appendages were not assembled at the end of the centriole when the
C2cd3 protein is not present. As a result, the centriole is not
associated with the cell membrane and cannot recruit other proteins for
the further growth of the cilium. "So our protein is required for the
very first step of putting a cilium together," Liu explained. "Without
those appendages, the cilium growth cannot happen."
The researchers hope their discovery will lead to greater knowledge
of the process of cilium development and, eventually, to treatments for a
wide range of health problems that fall under the label of ciliopathy.
"Ciliopathy is a scientific term that covers a lot of diseases," Liu
said. As well as contributing to cystic disorders in the kidney and
liver, lack of cilia can lead to blindness or deafness, since cilia in
the retina serve as receptors that process light stimulation and cilia
within the ear are required in neurons that translate sound waves into
neural signals.
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