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Membrane Proteins Take Different Trafficking Pathways to the Primary Cilium

Cilia are conserved organelles that extend from the surface of most eukaryotic cells. During development cilia play key roles in force generation and perception of the extracellular environment. Ciliary defects cause a broad class of human diseases called ciliopathies characterized by pleiotropic symptoms including cystic kidneys, retinal degeneration, cardiac malformations and skeletal deformations. Perception of the environment relies on specific proteins being localized to the ciliary membrane compartment. The mechanism for sorting and trafficking membrane proteins to the cilium is poorly understood. To address this question, I developed a fluorescence-based pulse-chase assay to measure the transport kinetics of ciliary membrane proteins. This assay was used to determine the importance of candidate proteins to the delivery of fibrocystin, polycystin-2, and smoothened to cilia. Using this assay, I found that ciliary delivery of fibrocystin and polycystin-2 requires IFT20, GMAP210 and the exocyst while smoothened delivery is largely independent of these proteins. In addition, I determined that polycystin-2, but not smoothened or fibrocystin require the biogenesis of lysosome related organelles complex-1 (BLOC-1) for ciliary delivery. Consistent with a requirement for BLOC-1 in ciliary transport of polycystin-2, BLOC-1 mutant mice have cystic kidney disease. BLOC-1 functions in endosomal sorting and I find that disrupting the recycling endosome also reduced ciliary polycystin-2 and causes its accumulation in the recycling endosome. This is the first demonstration of a role for BLOC-1 in ciliary biogenesis and highlights the complexity of trafficking pathways to the cilium.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:umassmed.edu/oai:escholarship.umassmed.edu:gsbs_diss-1952
Date14 December 2017
CreatorsMonis, William Joseph
PublishereScholarship@UMMS
Source SetsUniversity of Massachusetts Medical School
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceGSBS Dissertations and Theses
RightsCopyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved., select

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