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X-linked primary ciliary dyskinesia due to mutations in the cytoplasmic axonemal dynein assembly factor PIH1D3.

Authors :
Olcese C
Patel MP
Shoemark A
Kiviluoto S
Legendre M
Williams HJ
Vaughan CK
Hayward J
Goldenberg A
Emes RD
Munye MM
Dyer L
Cahill T
Bevillard J
Gehrig C
Guipponi M
Chantot S
Duquesnoy P
Thomas L
Jeanson L
Copin B
Tamalet A
Thauvin-Robinet C
Papon JF
Garin A
Pin I
Vera G
Aurora P
Fassad MR
Jenkins L
Boustred C
Cullup T
Dixon M
Onoufriadis A
Bush A
Chung EM
Antonarakis SE
Loebinger MR
Wilson R
Armengot M
Escudier E
Hogg C
Amselem S
Sun Z
Bartoloni L
Blouin JL
Mitchison HM
Source :
Nature communications [Nat Commun] 2017 Feb 08; Vol. 8, pp. 14279. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Feb 08.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

By moving essential body fluids and molecules, motile cilia and flagella govern respiratory mucociliary clearance, laterality determination and the transport of gametes and cerebrospinal fluid. Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is an autosomal recessive disorder frequently caused by non-assembly of dynein arm motors into cilia and flagella axonemes. Before their import into cilia and flagella, multi-subunit axonemal dynein arms are thought to be stabilized and pre-assembled in the cytoplasm through a DNAAF2-DNAAF4-HSP90 complex akin to the HSP90 co-chaperone R2TP complex. Here, we demonstrate that large genomic deletions as well as point mutations involving PIH1D3 are responsible for an X-linked form of PCD causing disruption of early axonemal dynein assembly. We propose that PIH1D3, a protein that emerges as a new player of the cytoplasmic pre-assembly pathway, is part of a complementary conserved R2TP-like HSP90 co-chaperone complex, the loss of which affects assembly of a subset of inner arm dyneins.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2041-1723
Volume :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Nature communications
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28176794
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14279