Abstract

The mother centriole of the centrosome is distinguished from immature daughter centrioles by the presence of accessory structures (distal and subdistal appendages), which play an important role in the organization of the primary cilium in quiescent cells. Primary cilia serve as sensory organelles, thus have been implicated in mediating intracellular signal transduction pathways. Here we report that Chibby (Cby), a highly conserved antagonist of the Wnt/β-catenin pathway, is a centriolar component specifically located at the distal end of the mother centriole and essential for assembly of the primary cilium. Cby appeared as a discrete dot in the middle of a ring-like structure revealed by staining with a distal appendage component of Cep164. Cby interacted with one of the appendage components, Cenexin (Cnx), which thereby abrogated the inhibitory effect of Cby on β-catenin-mediated transcriptional activation in a dose-dependent manner. Cby and Cnx did not precisely align, as Cby was detected at a more distal position than Cnx. Cnx emerged earlier than Cby during the cell cycle and was required for recruitment of Cby to the mother centriole. However, Cby was dispensable for Cnx localization to the centriole. During massive centriogenesis in in vitro cultured mouse tracheal epithelial cells, Cby and Cnx were expressed in a similar pattern, which was coincident with the expression of Foxj1. Our results suggest that Cby plays an important role in organization of both primary and motile cilia in collaboration with Cnx.

Highlights

  • Centrioles and their morphological equivalent, basal bodies, are complex structures composed of triplet microtubules organized into a 9-fold symmetry

  • Cby is Localized at the Distal End of the Mother Centriole To determine the intracellular distribution of Cby, we immunostained cycling cells with Cby-specific antibodies

  • Cby did not precisely align with other markers on the centriole. This is prominent with Cep135, which is known to preferentially localize at the proximal end of centrioles [2] (Figure 1B4), suggesting that Cby is present in the distal end

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Summary

Introduction

Centrioles and their morphological equivalent, basal bodies, are complex structures composed of triplet microtubules organized into a 9-fold symmetry. They are essential for cilia/flagella formation and the organization of centrosomes, which serve as primary microtubule-organizing centers (MTOC) in animal cells. The majority of distal end-specific components identified far have been shown to be essential for cilia formation [3,6,10,11,12], it is unknown how individual molecules function during the conversion of centrioles to basal bodies and organization of axonemal microtubules

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