Architectural Insights into a Ciliary Partition

Ciliary compartmentalization plays pivotal roles in ciliogenesis and in various signaling pathways. Here we describe a structure at the ciliary base that appears to have all the features required for compartmentalization and which we thus call the “ciliary partitioning system” (CPS). This complex co...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current biology 2013-02, Vol.23 (4), p.339-344
Hauptverfasser: Ounjai, Puey, Kim, Keunhwan D., Liu, Haichuan, Dong, Ming, Tauscher, Andrew N., Witkowska, H. Ewa, Downing, Kenneth H.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ciliary compartmentalization plays pivotal roles in ciliogenesis and in various signaling pathways. Here we describe a structure at the ciliary base that appears to have all the features required for compartmentalization and which we thus call the “ciliary partitioning system” (CPS). This complex consists of the terminal plate, which serves as a cytosolic “ciliary pore complex” (CPC), and a membrane region well suited to serve as a diffusion barrier. The CPC is a plate-shaped structure containing nine pores through which the microtubule doublets of the basal body pass. Each pore expands from the doublet B-tubule into an opening well suited for the passage of intraflagellar transport particles. The membrane diffusion barrier encompasses an extended region of detergent-resistant periciliary membrane (ciliary pocket) and a ring complex that connects the CPC to the membrane. Proteomics analysis shows involvement of the ciliary pocket in vesicle trafficking, suggesting that this region plays an active role in membrane transport. The CPC and the ring together form a complete partition defining the ciliary boundary. ► A pore complex and membrane diffusion barrier may serve as a partitioning system ► Direct association of the pore complex and membrane domain seals the cilia opening ► Pore-microtubule doublet association suggests a role in intraflagellar transport ► Proteomics reveals the involvement of the periciliary membrane domain in trafficking
ISSN:0960-9822
1879-0445
DOI:10.1016/j.cub.2013.01.029