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Ciliopathy patient variants reveal organelle-specific functions for TUBB4B in axonemal microtubules.

Authors :
Dodd DO
Mechaussier S
Yeyati PL
McPhie F
Anderson JR
Khoo CJ
Shoemark A
Gupta DK
Attard T
Zariwala MA
Legendre M
Bracht D
Wallmeier J
Gui M
Fassad MR
Parry DA
Tennant PA
Meynert A
Wheway G
Fares-Taie L
Black HA
Mitri-Frangieh R
Faucon C
Kaplan J
Patel M
McKie L
Megaw R
Gatsogiannis C
Mohamed MA
Aitken S
Gautier P
Reinholt FR
Hirst RA
O'Callaghan C
Heimdal K
Bottier M
Escudier E
Crowley S
Descartes M
Jabs EW
Kenia P
Amiel J
Bacci GM
Calogero C
Palazzo V
Tiberi L
Blümlein U
Rogers A
Wambach JA
Wegner DJ
Fulton AB
Kenna M
Rosenfeld M
Holm IA
Quigley A
Hall EA
Murphy LC
Cassidy DM
von Kriegsheim A
Papon JF
Pasquier L
Murris MS
Chalmers JD
Hogg C
Macleod KA
Urquhart DS
Unger S
Aitman TJ
Amselem S
Leigh MW
Knowles MR
Omran H
Mitchison HM
Brown A
Marsh JA
Welburn JPI
Ti SC
Horani A
Rozet JM
Perrault I
Mill P
Source :
Science (New York, N.Y.) [Science] 2024 Apr 26; Vol. 384 (6694), pp. eadf5489. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Apr 26.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Tubulin, one of the most abundant cytoskeletal building blocks, has numerous isotypes in metazoans encoded by different conserved genes. Whether these distinct isotypes form cell type- and context-specific microtubule structures is poorly understood. Based on a cohort of 12 patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia as well as mouse mutants, we identified and characterized variants in the TUBB4B isotype that specifically perturbed centriole and cilium biogenesis. Distinct TUBB4B variants differentially affected microtubule dynamics and cilia formation in a dominant-negative manner. Structure-function studies revealed that different TUBB4B variants disrupted distinct tubulin interfaces, thereby enabling stratification of patients into three classes of ciliopathic diseases. These findings show that specific tubulin isotypes have distinct and nonredundant subcellular functions and establish a link between tubulinopathies and ciliopathies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1095-9203
Volume :
384
Issue :
6694
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Science (New York, N.Y.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38662826
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adf5489