Mol. Cells 2017; 40(4): 243-253
Published online April 12, 2017
https://doi.org/10.14348/molcells.2017.0054
© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology
Correspondence to : *Correspondence: pelletier@lunenfeld.ca
Eukaryotic cilia are organelles that project from the surface of cells to fulfill motility and sensory functions. In vertebrates, the functions of both motile and immotile cilia are critical for embryonic development and adult tissue homeostasis. Importantly, a multitude of human diseases is caused by abnormal cilia biogenesis and functions which rely on the compartmentalization of the cilium and the maintenance of its protein composition. The transition zone (TZ) is a specialized ciliary domain present at the base of the cilium and is part of a gate that controls protein entry and exit from this organelle. The relevance of the TZ is highlighted by the fact that several of its components are coded by ciliopathy genes. Here we review recent developments in the study of TZ proteomes, the mapping of individual components to the TZ structure and the establishment of the TZ as a lipid gate.
Keywords centriole, centrosome, cilia, transition zone
Eukaryotic cilia/flagella are evolutionarily conserved microtu-bule (MT)-based organelles that protrude from the cell surface and play sensory and motility roles. In vertebrates, multiple cilia types are critical for embryonic development and homeostasis of adult tissues. Consequently, absence of cilia or their malfunction contributes to a plethora of human diseases (e.g. Primary cilia dyskinesis, Meckel-Gruber syndrome and Nephronophthisis) often presenting overlapping clinical manifestations such as: infertility, blindness, obesity, cognitive impairment, polydactyly, and polycystic kidneys (reviewed by Mitchison and Valente, 2017). The basic ciliary structure consists of an axoneme made of 9 MT doublets templated by a centriole/basal body (BB) attached to the cell membrane by transition fibers, and covered by a specialized membrane domain (Fig. 1). Motile cilia which promote cell movement or fluid flow generation typically have an additional MT central pair (9+2 axoneme) and accessory structures required for ciliary movement (e.g. axonemal dyneins and radial spokes). Immotile (primary) cilia fulfil sensory/signaling functions (e.g. Shh pathway in vertebrates) and usually lack a MT central pair (9+0 axoneme) and the machinery required for movement. Cilia assembly and maintenance rely on the intraflagellar transport (IFT) machinery which uses MT motors to transport cargo from the cell body to the ciliary tip and back (reviewed by Ishikawa and Marshall, 2017). In this review we focus on a ciliary sub-domain, the TZ, which corresponds to the proximal portion of the axoneme, distal to the BB. The TZ is required for the compartmentalization of the cilium, functioning as a gate that strictly controls the protein composition of the ciliary compartment (reviewed by Reiter et al., 2012). The TZ is characterized by MT-ciliary membrane connectors, usually y-shaped (y-links), and the ciliary necklace, a specialized membrane domain typified by rows of membrane particles encircling the base of the axoneme. This ciliary domain gained considerable attention in recent years since most of its known components are associated with human diseases. Here we review recent findings concerning the molecular composition of the TZ, the function and localization of TZ proteins, and the role of the TZ as a lipid gate.
Genetic interaction studies in
With the increasing number of known TZ components, attention is now focused on finely mapping the location of these proteins within the TZ. Recent studies in multiple model organisms used different imaging approaches to show that TZ proteins occupy distinct domains within this compartment. Stimulated emission depletion (STED) super resolution microscopy combined with electron microscopy (EM) were used to study the localization of the TZ proteins CEP290, RPGRIP1L, MKS1, TCTN2 and TMEM67 in human RPE-1 cells (Yang et al., 2015). CEP290’s signal had a width close to that of the axoneme, and occupied a proximal position close to the BB and transition fiber markers centrin and CEP164 respectively. RPGRIP1L was distal to CEP290 and presented a similar width. The MKS complex components MKS1, TCTN2 and TMEM67 were present at the same axial level as RPGRIP1L but occupied wider areas. TCNT2 and TMEM67, which are transmembrane proteins, were the most peripheral (Fig. 2). Consistent with these findings, in
Genetic interaction studies in
In the mouse, knocking-out genes coding for components of the MKS, NPHP and CEP290 modules affects ciliogenesis in a tissue-specific way (Chih et al, 2011; Cui et al., 2011; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011; Goetz et al., 2017; Rachel et al., 2015; Ronquillo et al., 2016; Sang et al., 2011; Vierkotten et al., 2007; Weatherbee et al., 2009; Yee et al., 2015). Knocking-out MKS module genes (e.g. MKS1, TCTN1, TCTN2, CC2D2A, TMEM67) phenocopies Meckel-Gruber syndrome phenotypes such as abnormal patterning of the neural tube and limbs buds and left-right asymmetry problems. Consistently, cilia in the embryonic node, required for left-right symmetry breaking, are often lost in these mutants. On the other hand cilia in the limb buds can form but are reduced in number and present abnormal protein composition and response to Shh. Nevertheless, differences between each individual mutant suggest distinct roles for individual MKS module proteins. For instance, TCNT1 or TCTN2 null MEFS (mouse embryonic fibroblasts) can ciliate (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011; Yee et al., 2015) whereas CC2D2A null MEFS fail to do so likely due to the lack of sub-distal appendages (Veleri et al., 2014). Regarding the NPHP module, an NPHP4 mutant mouse developed retinal degeneration but not kidney cysts nor severe ciliogenesis defects; males were infertile and presented sperm with reduced motility (Won et al., 2011). Similarly, NPHP1 null mice also presented retinal degeneration, a phenotype that was enhanced by the combined loss of AHI1 (Louie et al., 2010). CEP290 knock-out mice lack connecting cilia in photoreceptors and fail to mature motile ependymal cilia, which is consistent with their retinal degeneration and hydrocepahalus phenotypes (Rachel et al., 2015). NPHP5 null mice also fail to assemble connecting cilia whereas ciliogenesis is not affected in other tissues like the kidney (Ronquillo et al., 2016).
As in
Interestingly, despite the conservation in the TZ structure and core molecular composition, there are differences between species. For example,
Collectively, these studies support the data discussed in the previous sections showing that the different TZ complexes cooperate with each other for the assembly of the TZ and the cilium, as well as with multiple pathways for the correct delivery of cargo to the cilium. Moreover, genetic interaction studies will continue to significantly further our knowledge on the clinical severity spectra caused by ciliopathy mutations.
Multiple studies have established that the constitutive and regulated localization of proteins to the cilium compartment is highly dependent on a TZ gating function (reviewed in Reiter et al., 2012). Recent studies have also shown that the TZ acts as a lipid gate. Indeed, the TZ fulfils a conserved role in maintaining the ciliary membrane phosphoinositide (PI) composition. In mammalian cells the inositol polyphosphate-5-phosphatase E (INPP5E) localizes in the cilium where it hydrolyses its substrates PI(4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2 generating PI(4)P (Fig. 1; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2015). As a result, the activity of INPP5E restricts PI(4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2 to the TZ where they co-localize with TCTN1. On the other hand, PI(4)P is present throughout the ciliary membrane determining the localization of proteins involved in the Shh signaling pathway (Chávez et al., 2015; Dyson et al., 2016; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2015). Lack of INPP5E activity leads to the accumulation of PI(4,5)P2 as well as that of the PI(4,5)P2-binding protein TULP3 and its interactors IFT122, IFT139, IFT140 and GPR161 (negative regulators of the Shh pathway) in the cilium (Chávez et al., 2015; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2015). GPR161 accumulation leads to an increase in the production of cAMP with the consequent activation of PKA, a repressor of Shh signaling, and GLI3 repressor formation (Chávez et al., 2015). In INPP5E null cells, SMO still localizes to the cilium, albeit reduced, upon activation of the Shh pathway with SAG. However, GLI2 and GLI3 fail to accumulate at the ciliary tip and Shh target genes are not activated (Chávez et al., 2015; Dyson et al., 2016; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2015). INPP5E mutations cause Joubert and MORM (mental retardation, truncal obesity, retinal dystrophy and micropenis) syndromes and knocking out Inpp5e in mice phenocopies the effect of Inpp5e mutations in Joubert syndrome. These mice present phenotypes such as polydactyly, which are consistent with INPP5E’s role in Shh signaling regulation (Dyson et al., 2016). Importantly, the ciliary localization of INPP5E depends on the MKS complex proteins TCTN1, TMEM231, B9D1, and MKS1 (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011; Goetz et al., 2017; Roberson et al., 2015; Slaats et al., 2015). Moreover, the activation of the Shh pathway modulates the levels of PI(4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2 at the TZ. Upon SAG treatment the levels of these PIs increases both in WT and INPP5E null MEFS being the levels higher in the null background. Also, the TZ localization of MKS1, TCTN1, B9D1 and TMEM231 was significantly reduced in INPP5E null cells upon SAG treatment. This might be associated with the reduction of SEPT2 at the ciliary base upon SAG treatment. Septins are required for the localization of MKS module proteins (Chih et al., 2011) and interact with PIs such as PI(4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2 which regulate their polymerization (Dyson et al., 2016). Similar results were observed in
Multiple studies conducted decades ago in different model organisms have shown the ciliary membrane lipid composition to be different from that of the plasma membrane, and similar to that of lipid rafts (reviewed in Emmer et al., 2010). This special lipid composition, as evidenced by the studies discussed here, has an impact on protein targeting to the cilium and consequently on cilia-related signaling. We are still beginning to understand how the specialized ciliary lipid content is achieved and maintained. Moreover, further studies will be required to fully grasp how the regulated modulation of lipid species at the TZ and ciliary membrane is determined by and impacts on TZ proteins.
The TZ is a specialized domain present at the base of the axoneme and is characterized by structures of poorly characterized composition that connect the axonemal MTs to the ciliary membrane. Together with the transition fibers and septins, the TZ works as a gate that regulates the protein and lipid composition of the ciliary compartment. How this gate is formed and fulfills its functions is not entirely understood. Given the TZ roles in ciliary functions, and its involvement in human disease, significant efforts have been made to identify its components and understand how they work together to assemble the TZ and the cilium. Multiple studies led to identification of at least three conserved protein modules (MKS, NPHP, CEP290) composed of multiple proteins that cooperate for TZ formation and function, occupy distinct domains within it and have distinct roles in terms of protein sorting to the cilium compartment. Moreover, TZ proteins can localize to different structures (e.g. centrosome, centriolar satellites, cell junctions; Table 1) and interact physically and genetically with components of different machineries (e.g. ESCRT, BBSome, IFT) with which they seem to work for the efficient delivery of cargo to the cilium and other ciliary processes. In the future it will be important to understand the tissue-specific roles of the TZ and its components, what are their interactors and where they localize in the context of different cilia types which might have different gates. Excitingly, the recent technology developments in terms of genetic manipulation, protein interaction screening, and super-resolution imaging will allow us to study cilia and its sub-compartments, such as the TZ, in different ciliated cell types. Genetic interaction studies, protein-protein interaction screens, and protein localization mapping in different genetic backgrounds and conditions, will considerably contribute to elucidate the mechanisms of assembly, maintenance and function of different cilia types.
The scheme depicts the structure of a primary cilium. At their base eukaryotic cilia present a centriole/basal body, from which the axoneme microtubules elongate, and accessory structures such as the basal foot and the transition fibers. The ciliary membrane is a specialized membrane domain enriched in specific proteins (e.g. ARL13B) and lipid species (e.g. PI(4)P). At the proximal region of the axoneme is the transition zone characterized by microtubule-membrane connectors. Distal to the transition zone is localized the inversin domain which lacks y-links and has a distinct protein composition from the transition zone. The figure shows the protein modules present at the transition zone largely as they were described by
The schemes represent the localization of transition zone and basal body components in human,
TZ proteins – associated diseases and loss of function phenotypes in vertebrate systems
Protein | Associated disease | Sub-cellular localization | Loss of function phenotypes in vertebrate systems |
---|---|---|---|
MKS1 | MKS, JBTS, BBS | Centrosome, TZ | KO Mouse/RNAi/Patient fibroblasts - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling; affected ciliation in spheroids (Cui et al., 2011; Dawe et al., 2007; Weatherbee et al., 2012; Slaats et al., 2016; Goetz et al., 2017) |
B9D1 | MKS, JBTS, BBS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | KO Mouse/RNAi - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Chih et al., 2011; Dowdle et al., 2011; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011) |
B9D2 | MKS | Basal body, TZ, nucleus | KO Mouse - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011); KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Zhao and Malicki, 2011) |
TCTN1 | JBTS | Basal body, TZ | KO Mouse -Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011) |
TCTN2 | MKS, JBTS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | KO mouse -Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011; Sang et al., 2011) |
TCTN3 | JBTS, OFD4 | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | Patient fibroblasts - Disfunctional Shh signaling (Thomas et al., 2012) |
CC2D2A | MKS, JBTS, COACH | Centrosome, TZ | KO Mouse/RNAi - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Chih et al, 2011; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011); KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Bachmann-Gagescu et al., 2011; Gorden et al., 2008) |
TMEM17 | TZ | RNAi - mild ciliation phenotype; perturbed ciliary protein composition (Chih et., 2011); Patient fibroblasts - ciliation failure (Li et al., 2016) | |
TMEM67 | MKS, JBTS, COACH, NPHP, BBS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | KO Mouse -Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Abdelhamed et al., 2015; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011) |
TMEM107 | MKS, JBTS, OFD | TZ | Mutant Mouse - Tissue-specific ciliation defects and disfunctional Shh signaling (Christopher et al., 2012); RNAi/Patient fibroblasts- affected ciliation, ciliary gate, Shh signaling and spheroid formation (Lambacher et al., 2016; Shaheen et al., 2015; Shylo et al., 2016) |
TMEM216 | MKS, JBTS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme, Golgi | Patient fibroblasts/RNAi - affected ciliation; KD zebrafish - cilia and PCP-related phenotypes (Lee et al., 2012; Valente et al., 2010) |
TMEM231 | MKS, JBTS | TZ | KO Mouse/RNAi -Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Chih et al., 2011) |
TMEM237 | JBTS | TZ | Patient fibroblasts/RNAi -affected ciliation and WNT and PCP signal- ing; KD Zebrafish - developmental problems (Huang et al., 2011) |
NPHP1 | JBTS, NPHP, SLSN | TZ, cell junctions | KO Mouse - retinal degeneration (Louie et al., 2010); KD Zebrafish - pronephric problems (Slanchev et al., 2011); RNAi - defective formation of spheroids (Delous et al., 2009; Sang et al., 2011) |
NPHP4 | NPHP, SLSN | Centrosome, TZ, cilium, cell junctions | KO Mice - retinal degeneration; KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Slanchev et al., 2011); RNAi - defective formation of spheroids (Delous et al., 2009; Sang et al., 2011) |
CEP290 | MKS, JBTS, LCA, BBS, SLS | Centriolar satellites, centrosome, TZ | KO mouse -Tissue-specific ciliation defects (Rachel et al., 2015); KD Zebrafish - cilia related developmental problems (Sayer et al., 2006; Schäfer et al., 2008) |
NPHP5 | SLS | Centrosome, cilium | KO Mouse - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; retinal degeneration; failure to assemble TZ in photoreceptors (Ronquillo et al., 2016); KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Schäfer et al., 2008) |
RPGRIP1L | MKS, JBTS, COACH | Centrosome, basal body, TZ | KO Mouse - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disturbed Shh signaling (Vierkotten, et al., 2007); KD Zebrafish - cilia positioning and planar cell polarity phenotypes (Mahuzier et al., 2012) |
RPGRIP1 | LCA | Centrioles, TZ, axoneme | KO Mouse - retinal degeneration; required for the localization of other TZ proteins (Patil et al., 2012; Won et al., 2009; Zhao et al., 2003) |
RPGR | CORD, MC, RP | Centrosome, TZ | KO Mouse - retinal degeneration (Hong et al., 2000); RNAi - ciliation defect; alterations in the actin cytoskeleton (Gakovic et al., 2011); KD Zebrafish - cilia related developmental problems (Gerner et al., 2010) |
LCA5 | LCA | Centrosome, TZ, MTs | KO Mouse - retinal degeneration; defect in IFT (Boldt et al., 2011) |
AHI1 | JBTS | Mother centriole, basal body, TZ | KO Mouse - defective photoreceptors (Louie et al., 2010); RNAi - affected ciliation (Hsiao et al., 2009); Zebrafish Mutant - tissue specific ciliogenesis problems (Lessieur et al., 2017) |
CEP162 | TZ, MTs | RNAi - failure to assemble the TZ; KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Wang et al., 2013) | |
TMEM138 | JBTS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | Patient fibroblasts/RNAi - ciliation defects; KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental phenotypes (Lee et al., 2012) |
JBTS17 | JBTS | TZ | Mutant Mouse/Mutant MEFS/Patient fibroblasts - ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Damerla et al., 2015) |
TMEM80 | TZ |
MKS, Meckel syndrome; JBTS, Joubert syndrome; BBS, Bardet-Biedl syndrome; NPHP, Nephronophthisis; OFD4, Orofaciodigital syndrome IV; COACH, COACH syndrome; SLSN, Senior-Loken syndrome
LCA, Leber congenital amaurosis; CORD, Cone-rod dystrophy; MC, Macular degeneration; RP, Retinitis pigmentosa
KO, Knock-out; KD, Knock-down; MEFS, mouse embryonic fibroblasts
Mol. Cells 2017; 40(4): 243-253
Published online April 30, 2017 https://doi.org/10.14348/molcells.2017.0054
Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.
Jo?o Gon?alves1, and Laurence Pelletier1,2,*
1Lunenfeld-Tanenbaum Research Institute, Mount Sinai Hospital, 600 University Avenue, Toronto, ON M5G 1X5, Canada, 2Department of Molecular Genetics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 1A8, Canada
Correspondence to:*Correspondence: pelletier@lunenfeld.ca
Eukaryotic cilia are organelles that project from the surface of cells to fulfill motility and sensory functions. In vertebrates, the functions of both motile and immotile cilia are critical for embryonic development and adult tissue homeostasis. Importantly, a multitude of human diseases is caused by abnormal cilia biogenesis and functions which rely on the compartmentalization of the cilium and the maintenance of its protein composition. The transition zone (TZ) is a specialized ciliary domain present at the base of the cilium and is part of a gate that controls protein entry and exit from this organelle. The relevance of the TZ is highlighted by the fact that several of its components are coded by ciliopathy genes. Here we review recent developments in the study of TZ proteomes, the mapping of individual components to the TZ structure and the establishment of the TZ as a lipid gate.
Keywords: centriole, centrosome, cilia, transition zone
Eukaryotic cilia/flagella are evolutionarily conserved microtu-bule (MT)-based organelles that protrude from the cell surface and play sensory and motility roles. In vertebrates, multiple cilia types are critical for embryonic development and homeostasis of adult tissues. Consequently, absence of cilia or their malfunction contributes to a plethora of human diseases (e.g. Primary cilia dyskinesis, Meckel-Gruber syndrome and Nephronophthisis) often presenting overlapping clinical manifestations such as: infertility, blindness, obesity, cognitive impairment, polydactyly, and polycystic kidneys (reviewed by Mitchison and Valente, 2017). The basic ciliary structure consists of an axoneme made of 9 MT doublets templated by a centriole/basal body (BB) attached to the cell membrane by transition fibers, and covered by a specialized membrane domain (Fig. 1). Motile cilia which promote cell movement or fluid flow generation typically have an additional MT central pair (9+2 axoneme) and accessory structures required for ciliary movement (e.g. axonemal dyneins and radial spokes). Immotile (primary) cilia fulfil sensory/signaling functions (e.g. Shh pathway in vertebrates) and usually lack a MT central pair (9+0 axoneme) and the machinery required for movement. Cilia assembly and maintenance rely on the intraflagellar transport (IFT) machinery which uses MT motors to transport cargo from the cell body to the ciliary tip and back (reviewed by Ishikawa and Marshall, 2017). In this review we focus on a ciliary sub-domain, the TZ, which corresponds to the proximal portion of the axoneme, distal to the BB. The TZ is required for the compartmentalization of the cilium, functioning as a gate that strictly controls the protein composition of the ciliary compartment (reviewed by Reiter et al., 2012). The TZ is characterized by MT-ciliary membrane connectors, usually y-shaped (y-links), and the ciliary necklace, a specialized membrane domain typified by rows of membrane particles encircling the base of the axoneme. This ciliary domain gained considerable attention in recent years since most of its known components are associated with human diseases. Here we review recent findings concerning the molecular composition of the TZ, the function and localization of TZ proteins, and the role of the TZ as a lipid gate.
Genetic interaction studies in
With the increasing number of known TZ components, attention is now focused on finely mapping the location of these proteins within the TZ. Recent studies in multiple model organisms used different imaging approaches to show that TZ proteins occupy distinct domains within this compartment. Stimulated emission depletion (STED) super resolution microscopy combined with electron microscopy (EM) were used to study the localization of the TZ proteins CEP290, RPGRIP1L, MKS1, TCTN2 and TMEM67 in human RPE-1 cells (Yang et al., 2015). CEP290’s signal had a width close to that of the axoneme, and occupied a proximal position close to the BB and transition fiber markers centrin and CEP164 respectively. RPGRIP1L was distal to CEP290 and presented a similar width. The MKS complex components MKS1, TCTN2 and TMEM67 were present at the same axial level as RPGRIP1L but occupied wider areas. TCNT2 and TMEM67, which are transmembrane proteins, were the most peripheral (Fig. 2). Consistent with these findings, in
Genetic interaction studies in
In the mouse, knocking-out genes coding for components of the MKS, NPHP and CEP290 modules affects ciliogenesis in a tissue-specific way (Chih et al, 2011; Cui et al., 2011; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011; Goetz et al., 2017; Rachel et al., 2015; Ronquillo et al., 2016; Sang et al., 2011; Vierkotten et al., 2007; Weatherbee et al., 2009; Yee et al., 2015). Knocking-out MKS module genes (e.g. MKS1, TCTN1, TCTN2, CC2D2A, TMEM67) phenocopies Meckel-Gruber syndrome phenotypes such as abnormal patterning of the neural tube and limbs buds and left-right asymmetry problems. Consistently, cilia in the embryonic node, required for left-right symmetry breaking, are often lost in these mutants. On the other hand cilia in the limb buds can form but are reduced in number and present abnormal protein composition and response to Shh. Nevertheless, differences between each individual mutant suggest distinct roles for individual MKS module proteins. For instance, TCNT1 or TCTN2 null MEFS (mouse embryonic fibroblasts) can ciliate (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011; Yee et al., 2015) whereas CC2D2A null MEFS fail to do so likely due to the lack of sub-distal appendages (Veleri et al., 2014). Regarding the NPHP module, an NPHP4 mutant mouse developed retinal degeneration but not kidney cysts nor severe ciliogenesis defects; males were infertile and presented sperm with reduced motility (Won et al., 2011). Similarly, NPHP1 null mice also presented retinal degeneration, a phenotype that was enhanced by the combined loss of AHI1 (Louie et al., 2010). CEP290 knock-out mice lack connecting cilia in photoreceptors and fail to mature motile ependymal cilia, which is consistent with their retinal degeneration and hydrocepahalus phenotypes (Rachel et al., 2015). NPHP5 null mice also fail to assemble connecting cilia whereas ciliogenesis is not affected in other tissues like the kidney (Ronquillo et al., 2016).
As in
Interestingly, despite the conservation in the TZ structure and core molecular composition, there are differences between species. For example,
Collectively, these studies support the data discussed in the previous sections showing that the different TZ complexes cooperate with each other for the assembly of the TZ and the cilium, as well as with multiple pathways for the correct delivery of cargo to the cilium. Moreover, genetic interaction studies will continue to significantly further our knowledge on the clinical severity spectra caused by ciliopathy mutations.
Multiple studies have established that the constitutive and regulated localization of proteins to the cilium compartment is highly dependent on a TZ gating function (reviewed in Reiter et al., 2012). Recent studies have also shown that the TZ acts as a lipid gate. Indeed, the TZ fulfils a conserved role in maintaining the ciliary membrane phosphoinositide (PI) composition. In mammalian cells the inositol polyphosphate-5-phosphatase E (INPP5E) localizes in the cilium where it hydrolyses its substrates PI(4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2 generating PI(4)P (Fig. 1; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2015). As a result, the activity of INPP5E restricts PI(4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2 to the TZ where they co-localize with TCTN1. On the other hand, PI(4)P is present throughout the ciliary membrane determining the localization of proteins involved in the Shh signaling pathway (Chávez et al., 2015; Dyson et al., 2016; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2015). Lack of INPP5E activity leads to the accumulation of PI(4,5)P2 as well as that of the PI(4,5)P2-binding protein TULP3 and its interactors IFT122, IFT139, IFT140 and GPR161 (negative regulators of the Shh pathway) in the cilium (Chávez et al., 2015; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2015). GPR161 accumulation leads to an increase in the production of cAMP with the consequent activation of PKA, a repressor of Shh signaling, and GLI3 repressor formation (Chávez et al., 2015). In INPP5E null cells, SMO still localizes to the cilium, albeit reduced, upon activation of the Shh pathway with SAG. However, GLI2 and GLI3 fail to accumulate at the ciliary tip and Shh target genes are not activated (Chávez et al., 2015; Dyson et al., 2016; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2015). INPP5E mutations cause Joubert and MORM (mental retardation, truncal obesity, retinal dystrophy and micropenis) syndromes and knocking out Inpp5e in mice phenocopies the effect of Inpp5e mutations in Joubert syndrome. These mice present phenotypes such as polydactyly, which are consistent with INPP5E’s role in Shh signaling regulation (Dyson et al., 2016). Importantly, the ciliary localization of INPP5E depends on the MKS complex proteins TCTN1, TMEM231, B9D1, and MKS1 (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011; Goetz et al., 2017; Roberson et al., 2015; Slaats et al., 2015). Moreover, the activation of the Shh pathway modulates the levels of PI(4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2 at the TZ. Upon SAG treatment the levels of these PIs increases both in WT and INPP5E null MEFS being the levels higher in the null background. Also, the TZ localization of MKS1, TCTN1, B9D1 and TMEM231 was significantly reduced in INPP5E null cells upon SAG treatment. This might be associated with the reduction of SEPT2 at the ciliary base upon SAG treatment. Septins are required for the localization of MKS module proteins (Chih et al., 2011) and interact with PIs such as PI(4,5)P3 and PI(4,5)P2 which regulate their polymerization (Dyson et al., 2016). Similar results were observed in
Multiple studies conducted decades ago in different model organisms have shown the ciliary membrane lipid composition to be different from that of the plasma membrane, and similar to that of lipid rafts (reviewed in Emmer et al., 2010). This special lipid composition, as evidenced by the studies discussed here, has an impact on protein targeting to the cilium and consequently on cilia-related signaling. We are still beginning to understand how the specialized ciliary lipid content is achieved and maintained. Moreover, further studies will be required to fully grasp how the regulated modulation of lipid species at the TZ and ciliary membrane is determined by and impacts on TZ proteins.
The TZ is a specialized domain present at the base of the axoneme and is characterized by structures of poorly characterized composition that connect the axonemal MTs to the ciliary membrane. Together with the transition fibers and septins, the TZ works as a gate that regulates the protein and lipid composition of the ciliary compartment. How this gate is formed and fulfills its functions is not entirely understood. Given the TZ roles in ciliary functions, and its involvement in human disease, significant efforts have been made to identify its components and understand how they work together to assemble the TZ and the cilium. Multiple studies led to identification of at least three conserved protein modules (MKS, NPHP, CEP290) composed of multiple proteins that cooperate for TZ formation and function, occupy distinct domains within it and have distinct roles in terms of protein sorting to the cilium compartment. Moreover, TZ proteins can localize to different structures (e.g. centrosome, centriolar satellites, cell junctions; Table 1) and interact physically and genetically with components of different machineries (e.g. ESCRT, BBSome, IFT) with which they seem to work for the efficient delivery of cargo to the cilium and other ciliary processes. In the future it will be important to understand the tissue-specific roles of the TZ and its components, what are their interactors and where they localize in the context of different cilia types which might have different gates. Excitingly, the recent technology developments in terms of genetic manipulation, protein interaction screening, and super-resolution imaging will allow us to study cilia and its sub-compartments, such as the TZ, in different ciliated cell types. Genetic interaction studies, protein-protein interaction screens, and protein localization mapping in different genetic backgrounds and conditions, will considerably contribute to elucidate the mechanisms of assembly, maintenance and function of different cilia types.
The scheme depicts the structure of a primary cilium. At their base eukaryotic cilia present a centriole/basal body, from which the axoneme microtubules elongate, and accessory structures such as the basal foot and the transition fibers. The ciliary membrane is a specialized membrane domain enriched in specific proteins (e.g. ARL13B) and lipid species (e.g. PI(4)P). At the proximal region of the axoneme is the transition zone characterized by microtubule-membrane connectors. Distal to the transition zone is localized the inversin domain which lacks y-links and has a distinct protein composition from the transition zone. The figure shows the protein modules present at the transition zone largely as they were described by
The schemes represent the localization of transition zone and basal body components in human,
. TZ proteins – associated diseases and loss of function phenotypes in vertebrate systems.
Protein | Associated disease | Sub-cellular localization | Loss of function phenotypes in vertebrate systems |
---|---|---|---|
MKS1 | MKS, JBTS, BBS | Centrosome, TZ | KO Mouse/RNAi/Patient fibroblasts - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling; affected ciliation in spheroids (Cui et al., 2011; Dawe et al., 2007; Weatherbee et al., 2012; Slaats et al., 2016; Goetz et al., 2017) |
B9D1 | MKS, JBTS, BBS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | KO Mouse/RNAi - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Chih et al., 2011; Dowdle et al., 2011; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011) |
B9D2 | MKS | Basal body, TZ, nucleus | KO Mouse - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011); KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Zhao and Malicki, 2011) |
TCTN1 | JBTS | Basal body, TZ | KO Mouse -Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011) |
TCTN2 | MKS, JBTS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | KO mouse -Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011; Sang et al., 2011) |
TCTN3 | JBTS, OFD4 | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | Patient fibroblasts - Disfunctional Shh signaling (Thomas et al., 2012) |
CC2D2A | MKS, JBTS, COACH | Centrosome, TZ | KO Mouse/RNAi - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Chih et al, 2011; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011); KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Bachmann-Gagescu et al., 2011; Gorden et al., 2008) |
TMEM17 | TZ | RNAi - mild ciliation phenotype; perturbed ciliary protein composition (Chih et., 2011); Patient fibroblasts - ciliation failure (Li et al., 2016) | |
TMEM67 | MKS, JBTS, COACH, NPHP, BBS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | KO Mouse -Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Abdelhamed et al., 2015; Garcia-Gonzalo et al., 2011) |
TMEM107 | MKS, JBTS, OFD | TZ | Mutant Mouse - Tissue-specific ciliation defects and disfunctional Shh signaling (Christopher et al., 2012); RNAi/Patient fibroblasts- affected ciliation, ciliary gate, Shh signaling and spheroid formation (Lambacher et al., 2016; Shaheen et al., 2015; Shylo et al., 2016) |
TMEM216 | MKS, JBTS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme, Golgi | Patient fibroblasts/RNAi - affected ciliation; KD zebrafish - cilia and PCP-related phenotypes (Lee et al., 2012; Valente et al., 2010) |
TMEM231 | MKS, JBTS | TZ | KO Mouse/RNAi -Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Chih et al., 2011) |
TMEM237 | JBTS | TZ | Patient fibroblasts/RNAi -affected ciliation and WNT and PCP signal- ing; KD Zebrafish - developmental problems (Huang et al., 2011) |
NPHP1 | JBTS, NPHP, SLSN | TZ, cell junctions | KO Mouse - retinal degeneration (Louie et al., 2010); KD Zebrafish - pronephric problems (Slanchev et al., 2011); RNAi - defective formation of spheroids (Delous et al., 2009; Sang et al., 2011) |
NPHP4 | NPHP, SLSN | Centrosome, TZ, cilium, cell junctions | KO Mice - retinal degeneration; KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Slanchev et al., 2011); RNAi - defective formation of spheroids (Delous et al., 2009; Sang et al., 2011) |
CEP290 | MKS, JBTS, LCA, BBS, SLS | Centriolar satellites, centrosome, TZ | KO mouse -Tissue-specific ciliation defects (Rachel et al., 2015); KD Zebrafish - cilia related developmental problems (Sayer et al., 2006; Schäfer et al., 2008) |
NPHP5 | SLS | Centrosome, cilium | KO Mouse - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; retinal degeneration; failure to assemble TZ in photoreceptors (Ronquillo et al., 2016); KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Schäfer et al., 2008) |
RPGRIP1L | MKS, JBTS, COACH | Centrosome, basal body, TZ | KO Mouse - Tissue-specific ciliation defects; disturbed Shh signaling (Vierkotten, et al., 2007); KD Zebrafish - cilia positioning and planar cell polarity phenotypes (Mahuzier et al., 2012) |
RPGRIP1 | LCA | Centrioles, TZ, axoneme | KO Mouse - retinal degeneration; required for the localization of other TZ proteins (Patil et al., 2012; Won et al., 2009; Zhao et al., 2003) |
RPGR | CORD, MC, RP | Centrosome, TZ | KO Mouse - retinal degeneration (Hong et al., 2000); RNAi - ciliation defect; alterations in the actin cytoskeleton (Gakovic et al., 2011); KD Zebrafish - cilia related developmental problems (Gerner et al., 2010) |
LCA5 | LCA | Centrosome, TZ, MTs | KO Mouse - retinal degeneration; defect in IFT (Boldt et al., 2011) |
AHI1 | JBTS | Mother centriole, basal body, TZ | KO Mouse - defective photoreceptors (Louie et al., 2010); RNAi - affected ciliation (Hsiao et al., 2009); Zebrafish Mutant - tissue specific ciliogenesis problems (Lessieur et al., 2017) |
CEP162 | TZ, MTs | RNAi - failure to assemble the TZ; KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental problems (Wang et al., 2013) | |
TMEM138 | JBTS | Basal body, TZ, axoneme | Patient fibroblasts/RNAi - ciliation defects; KD Zebrafish - cilia-related developmental phenotypes (Lee et al., 2012) |
JBTS17 | JBTS | TZ | Mutant Mouse/Mutant MEFS/Patient fibroblasts - ciliation defects; disfunctional ciliary gate and Shh signaling (Damerla et al., 2015) |
TMEM80 | TZ |
MKS, Meckel syndrome; JBTS, Joubert syndrome; BBS, Bardet-Biedl syndrome; NPHP, Nephronophthisis; OFD4, Orofaciodigital syndrome IV; COACH, COACH syndrome; SLSN, Senior-Loken syndrome.
LCA, Leber congenital amaurosis; CORD, Cone-rod dystrophy; MC, Macular degeneration; RP, Retinitis pigmentosa.
KO, Knock-out; KD, Knock-down; MEFS, mouse embryonic fibroblasts.
Dasom Gwon, Jihee Hong, and Chang-Young Jang
Mol. Cells 2019; 42(12): 840-849 https://doi.org/10.14348/molcells.2019.0142Jadranka Loncarek, Alexey Khodjakov
Mol. Cells 2009; 27(2): 135-142 https://doi.org/10.1007/s10059-009-0017-zByungho Shin, Myung Se Kim, Yejoo Lee, Gee In Jung, and Kunsoo Rhee
Mol. Cells 2021; 44(10): 699-705 https://doi.org/10.14348/molcells.2021.0220
The scheme depicts the structure of a primary cilium. At their base eukaryotic cilia present a centriole/basal body, from which the axoneme microtubules elongate, and accessory structures such as the basal foot and the transition fibers. The ciliary membrane is a specialized membrane domain enriched in specific proteins (e.g. ARL13B) and lipid species (e.g. PI(4)P). At the proximal region of the axoneme is the transition zone characterized by microtubule-membrane connectors. Distal to the transition zone is localized the inversin domain which lacks y-links and has a distinct protein composition from the transition zone. The figure shows the protein modules present at the transition zone largely as they were described by
The schemes represent the localization of transition zone and basal body components in human,