Litcius/Paper detail

DYF-5/MAK–dependent phosphorylation promotes ciliary tubulin unloading

Xuguang Jiang, Wenxin Shao, Yongping Chai, Jingying Huang, Mohamed A. A. Mohamed, Zeynep Ökten, Wei Li, Zhiwen Zhu, Guangshuo Ou

2022Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cilia are microtubule-based organelles that power cell motility and regulate sensation and signaling, and abnormal ciliary structure and function cause various ciliopathies. Cilium formation and maintenance requires intraflagellar transport (IFT), during which the kinesin-2 family motor proteins ferry IFT particles carrying axonemal precursors such as tubulins into cilia. Tubulin dimers are loaded to IFT machinery through an interaction between tubulin and the IFT-74/81 module; however, little is known of how tubulins are unloaded when arriving at the ciliary tip. Here, we show that the ciliary kinase DYF-5/MAK phosphorylates multiple sites within the tubulin-binding module of IFT-74, reducing the tubulin-binding affinity of IFT-74/81 approximately sixfold. Ablation or constitutive activation of IFT-74 phosphorylation abnormally elongates or shortens sensory cilia in Caenorhabditis elegans neurons. We propose that DYF-5/MAK–dependent phosphorylation plays a fundamental role in ciliogenesis by regulating tubulin unloading.

Topics & Concepts

PhosphorylationCell biologyTubulinChemistryMicrotubuleBiologyGenetic and Kidney Cyst DiseasesEpigenetics and DNA MethylationProtist diversity and phylogeny