dynein heavy chains
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2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (15) ◽  
pp. 1834-1845 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ramila S. Patel-King ◽  
Miho Sakato-Antoku ◽  
Maya Yankova ◽  
Stephen M. King

WDR92 associates with a prefoldin-like cochaperone complex and known dynein assembly factors. WDR92 has been very highly conserved and has a phylogenetic signature consistent with it playing a role in motile ciliary assembly or activity. Knockdown of WDR92 expression in planaria resulted in ciliary loss, reduced beat frequency and dyskinetic motion of the remaining ventral cilia. We have now identified a Chlamydomonas wdr92 mutant that encodes a protein missing the last four WD repeats. The wdr92-1 mutant builds only ∼0.7-μm cilia lacking both inner and outer dynein arms, but with intact doublet microtubules and central pair. When cytoplasmic extracts prepared by freeze/thaw from a control strain were fractionated by gel filtration, outer arm dynein components were present in several distinct high molecular weight complexes. In contrast, wdr92-1 extracts almost completely lacked all three outer arm heavy chains, while the IFT dynein heavy chain was present in normal amounts. A wdr92-1 tpg1-2 double mutant builds ∼7-μm immotile flaccid cilia that completely lack dynein arms. These data indicate that WDR92 is a key assembly factor specifically required for the stability of axonemal dynein heavy chains in cytoplasm and suggest that cytoplasmic/IFT dynein heavy chains use a distinct folding pathway.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Girish R Mali ◽  
Patricia Yeyati ◽  
Seiya Mizuno ◽  
Margaret A Keighren ◽  
Petra zur Lage ◽  
...  

AbstractMolecular chaperones promote the folding and macromolecular assembly of a diverse set of substrate ‘client’ proteins. How the ubiquitous chaperone machinery directs its activities towards a specific set of substrates and whether this selectivity could be targeted for therapeutic intervention is of intense research. Through the use of mouse genetics, imaging and quantitative proteomics we uncover that ZMYND10 is a novel co-chaperone for the FKBP8-HSP90 chaperone complex during the biosynthesis of axonemal dynein heavy chains required for cilia motility. In the absence of ZMYND10, defects in dynein heavy chains trigger broader dynein motor degradation. We show that FKBP8 inhibition phenocopies dynein motor instability in airway cells, and human disease-causing variants of ZMYND10 disrupt its ability to act as FKBP8-HSP90 co-chaperone. Our study indicates that the motile ciliopathy Primary Ciliary Dyskinesia (PCD) should be considered a cell-type specific protein-misfolding disease and opens the potential for rational drug design that could restore specificity to the ubiquitous chaperone apparatus towards dynein subunits.


2014 ◽  
Vol 25 (17) ◽  
pp. 2620-2633 ◽  
Author(s):  
Thierry Blisnick ◽  
Johanna Buisson ◽  
Sabrina Absalon ◽  
Alexandra Marie ◽  
Nadège Cayet ◽  
...  

Cilia and flagella are assembled by intraflagellar transport (IFT) of protein complexes that bring tubulin and other precursors to the incorporation site at their distal tip. Anterograde transport is driven by kinesin, whereas retrograde transport is ensured by a specific dynein. In the protist Trypanosoma brucei, two distinct genes encode fairly different dynein heavy chains (DHCs; ∼40% identity) termed DHC2.1 and DHC2.2, which form a heterodimer and are both essential for retrograde IFT. The stability of each heavy chain relies on the presence of a dynein light intermediate chain (DLI1; also known as XBX-1/D1bLIC). The presence of both heavy chains and of DLI1 at the base of the flagellum depends on the intermediate dynein chain DIC5 (FAP133/WDR34). In the IFT140RNAi mutant, an IFT-A protein essential for retrograde transport, the IFT dynein components are found at high concentration at the flagellar base but fail to penetrate the flagellar compartment. We propose a model by which the IFT dynein particle is assembled in the cytoplasm, reaches the base of the flagellum, and associates with the IFT machinery in a manner dependent on the IFT-A complex.


Cytoskeleton ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 67 (7) ◽  
pp. 466-476 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hiroko Takazaki ◽  
Zhongmei Liu ◽  
Mingyue Jin ◽  
Ritsu Kamiya ◽  
Takuo Yasunaga

2009 ◽  
Vol 186 (3) ◽  
pp. 437-446 ◽  
Author(s):  
Khanh Huy Bui ◽  
Hitoshi Sakakibara ◽  
Tandis Movassagh ◽  
Kazuhiro Oiwa ◽  
Takashi Ishikawa

Although the widely shared “9 + 2” structure of axonemes is thought to be highly symmetrical, axonemes show asymmetrical bending during planar and conical motion. In this study, using electron cryotomography and single particle averaging, we demonstrate an asymmetrical molecular arrangement of proteins binding to the nine microtubule doublets in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii flagella. The eight inner arm dynein heavy chains regulate and determine flagellar waveform. Among these, one heavy chain (dynein c) is missing on one microtubule doublet (this doublet also lacks the outer dynein arm), and another dynein heavy chain (dynein b or g) is missing on the adjacent doublet. Some dynein heavy chains either show an abnormal conformation or were replaced by other proteins, possibly minor dyneins. In addition to nexin, there are two additional linkages between specific pairs of doublets. Interestingly, all these exceptional arrangements take place on doublets on opposite sides of the axoneme, suggesting that the transverse functional asymmetry of the axoneme causes an in-plane bending motion.


2005 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 133-140 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siming Liu ◽  
Todd Hennessey ◽  
Scott Rankin ◽  
David G. Pennock

2004 ◽  
Vol 59 (3) ◽  
pp. 201-214 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siming Liu ◽  
Robert Hard ◽  
Scott Rankin ◽  
Todd Hennessey ◽  
David G. Pennock

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