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First published online February 9, 2010
doi: 10.1242/jcs.062968
Commentaries |
Departments of Pathology and Microbiology-Immunology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL 60611, USA
* Author for correspondence (d-engman{at}northwestern.edu)
| Summary |
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Key words: Cilia, Intraflagellar transport, Lipid rafts, Palmitoylation, Targeting
| Introduction |
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Cilia can be motile or immotile. Motile cilia have a readily observable function, whether it be the propulsion of the cell through fluid (e.g. the protists) or the sweeping of material along the cell surface (e.g. respiratory epithelial cells). By contrast, since their discovery over 100 years ago (Zimmermann, 1898
), immotile cilia have been mostly thought to be vestigial organelles. More recently, however, the finding that dysfunction of immotile cilia is linked to a variety of human diseases (collectively known as ciliopathies) has led to a resurgence of interest in investigating the physiological functions and biogenesis of cilia (Tobin and Beales, 2009
). For example, the proteins in which mutations cause autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease (European Polycystic Kidney Disease Consortium, 1994
; Mochizuki et al., 1996
) have been shown to function in ciliary signaling (Pazour et al., 2000
; Torres and Harris, 2006
). Renal tubular epithelial cells sense lumenal urine flow through deflection of their primary cilia. This in turn causes an intraciliary calcium flux, regulated by the transmembrane proteins polycystin-1 and polycystin-2, that modulates downstream STAT6 and Wnt cellular proliferation pathways. Dysregulation of this pathway as a result of mutations in the genes encoding the polycystins leads to the hallmark pathologic features of autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease.
At the same time that investigations of the primary cilium illuminated its important sensory functions, studies of motile cilia revealed a surprising complexity in these ancient organelles. Putative signaling proteins, including protein kinases and phosphodiesterases, localize to motile cilia in a variety of cell types, indicating the potential for signal transduction. The best-understood signaling pathways that have been characterized in cilia include the guanylyl-cyclase-mediated chemotactic response of sea urchin spermatozoa (Kaupp, 2003
) and an adenylyl-cyclase- and phosphorylation-dependent mating process activated by flagellar adhesion of Chlamydomonas (Pan and Snell, 2000
). In humans, airway epithelial cilia have recently been shown to regulate their beat frequency in response to extracellular noxious stimuli through a calcium-regulated pathway (Shah, 2009
). Phylogenetic analysis of the structural components of the eukaryotic cilium has led to a model whereby a common eukaryotic ancestor contained a single 9 + 2 cilium, probably derived from the microtubule intracellular transport system, with combined sensory and motor functions (Mitchell, 2007
). In certain cell types, including vertebrate photoreceptors and olfactory neurons, cilia then further evolved to perform tissue-specific functions.
The recent increase in our understanding of the importance of ciliary function in physiology has led to renewed interest in the molecular mechanisms that underlie ciliary biogenesis and maintenance. Although the current understanding of protein and lipid targeting is not as advanced for the cilium as for organelles such as the endoplasmic reticulum or lysosome, several recent reports have begun to elucidate the mechanisms involved. In this Commentary, we draw on recent findings to present a general model for the transport of ciliary membrane proteins and lipids from the Golgi complex to the ciliary membrane. We focus on molecules known to play specific roles in ciliary targeting, rather than on those molecules that are generally involved in establishment of cell polarity or in mediating vesicular transport. We draw on examples from diverse organisms and assume that key themes, if not exact molecules, are probably common to ciliary biogenesis and targeting in all eukaryotes.
| Axoneme assembly |
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| Ciliary membrane trafficking |
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| Cargo sorting and vesicle budding at the Golgi |
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Targeting of proteins to different cellular locations can be mediated by recognition of targeting sequences within the cargo by specific receptors. These receptors might be the GTPases themselves or the coat protein complexes whose assembly they promote. The benefits of identifying organelle-specific targeting sequences are twofold. First, it enables prediction of localization for other proteins that have the same the targeting sequence. Second, it provides a means of identifying the molecular interactions that cause this targeting (e.g. binding of ER-resident proteins to the KDEL receptor). A variety of ciliary targeting sequences have been identified that contain diverse polypeptide and acylation motifs (Pazour and Bloodgood, 2008
). However, the manner in which these sequences confer ciliary targeting remains largely obscure. An exception is the direct binding of the GTPase Arf4 by the rhodopsin VxPx motif, a ciliary targeting sequence that is common to the ciliary proteins polycystin-2 in renal tubule epithelial cells (Geng, 2006) and cyclic-nucleotide-gated channel β1 (CNG-β1) in olfactory neurons (Jenkins et al., 2006
). In the Golgi, Arf4 binding to rhodopsin via this motif promotes the assembly of a complex that includes Rab11, ASAP1 (ArfGAP with SH3 domain, ankyrin repeat and PH domain 1) and FIP3 (Rab11-family-interacting protein 3) and in turn triggers vesicle budding from the trans-Golgi network (Inoue et al., 2008
; Mazelova et al., 2009a
). ASAP1 seems to be a key player in these events because it possesses a Bin-Amphiphysin-Rvs (BAR) domain that binds to curved membranes and promotes further membrane deformation (Nie et al., 2006
). ASAP1 can actually promote tubulation of vesicles in vitro (Krauss et al., 2008
), suggesting that it can facilitate vesicle budding from the trans-Golgi network. Therefore, this multiprotein complex might be involved in a mechanism for the selective sorting of ciliary proteins into vesicles and vesicular budding. Further investigation of the mechanisms by which ciliary targeting sequences confer localization will undoubtedly elucidate additional molecules involved in ciliary targeting. It should be noted that the divergence of ciliary targeting sequences probably reflects coevolution with binding partners; the nature of the sequence itself might not be as important as the physiological interaction that facilitates proper trafficking.
Another binding partner for a ciliary targeting motif has also recently been described. CNG-β1 was shown to both colocalize and coimmunoprecipitate with the membrane adaptor ankyrin-G through its C-terminal domain. This interaction is both necessary and sufficient for the targeting of human CNG-β1 to the ciliary membrane when expressed in Xenopus photoreceptors (Kizhatil et al., 2009
). However, the stage of transport at which this interaction confers targeting to the ciliary membrane remains unclear.
In addition to transport mediated by the direct binding of vesicle membrane proteins, ciliary cargo might be recruited into ciliary-bound vesicles indirectly through interactions with other ciliary proteins that serve as adaptors. A promising candidate for such an adaptor is the IFT protein IFT20. In contrast to all other known IFT components, which localize to the cilium and/or basal body, IFT20 also localizes to the Golgi (Follit et al., 2006
). The pools of Golgi-localized IFT20 and IFT20 localized to the basal body and/or cilium are in dynamic exchange. Total inhibition of IFT20 expression prevents ciliogenesis, whereas partial inhibition that depletes the amount of IFT20 in the Golgi pool but not the ciliary pool results in defective transport of polycystin-2 to the ciliary membrane. This suggests that IFT20 serves as an adaptor or chaperone for the targeting of polycystin-2 to the ciliary membrane.
IFT20 is anchored to the Golgi through its interaction with GMAP210 (also known as thyroid hormone receptor interacting protein 11, TRIP11) (Follit et al., 2008
), a member of the golgin family of proteins. GMAP210 contains both an ArfGAP1 lipid-packing sensor (ALPS) domain that preferentially binds to curved membranes (Drin et al., 2008
) and GRIP-related Arf-binding (GRAB) domains that bind to small GTPases (Short et al., 2005
). Notably, although cells from GMAP210-null mice exhibit normal Golgi architecture, they have reduced levels of polycystin-2 in their ciliary membranes. Both IFT20 and GMAP210 therefore have clear roles in the trafficking of polycystin-2 to the ciliary membrane, and are ideally positioned to mediate cargo sorting within the Golgi. Given these findings, it will be interesting to know whether these proteins perform a similar function in the transport of other ciliary cargo, and whether they do so through their interaction with specific GTPases.
| Vesicle targeting and fusion at the periciliary membrane |
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In addition to Rab11, several other GTPases play a role in ciliary protein targeting. Rab8 associates with ciliary-bound vesicles soon after they bud from the Golgi. Expression of dominant-negative Rab8 impairs rhodopsin delivery in Xenopus photoreceptors (Moritz et al., 2001
), as well as the delivery of membrane to the primary cilia of immortalized human retinal pigment epithelial cells (Nachury et al., 2007
). The work by Nachury and colleagues also showed that the activity of Rab8 requires the expression of a GEF (Rabin8) that interacts with a multiprotein complex called the BBSome. The exact function of the BBSome is unclear, although it is known that mutations in the proteins that it comprises cause Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS), a pleiotropic disease associated with multiple ciliary signaling defects (Blacque and Leroux, 2006
). One of the BBSome proteins is Arl6, a GTPase that was previously found to be involved in ciliary trafficking (Fan et al., 2004
). Other GTPases implicated in ciliary targeting include IFT27 in Chlamydomonas (Qin et al., 2007
) and RabL5 in Trypanosoma brucei (Adhiambo et al., 2009
). Finally, systematic screening of 46 human Rabs demonstrated a requirement for Rab23 and Rab17, in addition to Rab8, in ciliogenesis (Yoshimura et al., 2007
). Therefore, multiple GTPases have been identified that probably contribute to ciliary membrane trafficking through the assembly of multiprotein complexes on vesicle coats.
Vesicle delivery to target membranes is guided by the cytoskeleton. Very little is known, however, about the cytoskeletal interactions that guide vesicle delivery to the ciliary membrane. In photoreceptors, Rab8 colocalizes with actin filaments near the vesicle fusion site, and this colocalization seems to be mediated by ezrin and/or moesin and Rac1 (Deretic et al., 2004
). In addition, it has been shown that inhibition of the actin-based motor myosin-VIIa disrupts rhodopsin delivery (Liu, 1999). The actin network thus might be involved in transporting vesicles to the ciliary membrane. More research is needed to clarify the extent of actin involvement in guiding vesicle transport to the cilium, and how this process might intersect with microtubule-based transport.
Once vesicles are tethered to target membranous compartments, soluble NSF attachment protein receptor (SNARE) proteins on vesicle (v-SNARE) and target (t-SNARE) membranes drive membrane fusion. Although the pairing of specific v-SNAREs with cognate t-SNAREs does not confer specificity to vesicle targeting, particular SNARE pairings are associated with specific fusion events (Bethani et al., 2007
; Brandhorst et al., 2006
; Guo, 2000; ter Beest et al., 2005
). In vertebrate photoreceptors, the membrane at the base of the cilium is enriched in the t-SNARE syntaxin 3 in a manner that depends on microtubules (Mazelova et al., 2009b
). Modulation of the cell lipid composition that promotes the association of syntaxin 3 with another t-SNARE, SNAP-25, correlates with increased delivery of rhodopsin to the ciliary membrane. Therefore, syntaxin 3 and SNAP-25 are promising candidates for mediating the fusion of vesicles at the base of the ciliary membrane and, together with the GTPases, multiprotein complexes and cytoskeletal elements discussed above, are probably key players in this crucial step of ciliary targeting.
| Intraciliary movement |
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Despite the difficulties in detecting an interaction between IFT complexes and membrane proteins, several lines of evidence suggest that IFT plays a role in the transport of ciliary membrane proteins. Cyclic-nucleotide-gated channels in mammalian cells (Jenkins et al., 2006
) and a membrane-bound aurora kinase in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii have both been shown to require IFT for their transport into the cilium (Pan and Snell, 2003
), and polycystin-2 accumulates in cilia when retrograde IFT is inhibited in a variety of cell types (Huang et al., 2007
; Pazour et al., 2002
). Perhaps most convincingly, ciliary transient receptor potential vanilloid (TRPV) channels have been visualized translocating within Caenorhabditis elegans cilia at speeds that are characteristic of IFT (Qin et al., 2005
).
Evidence of a biochemical association between IFT complexes and ciliary membrane proteins has also emerged. For example, IFT complexes co-purify with DnaJ chaperones and the membrane-associated proteins rhodopsin and guanylyl cyclase 1 in photoreceptors (Bhowmick et al., 2009
). In addition, an indirect association between Rab8 and IFT20 through Elipsa and rabaptin 5 has recently been reported, and the inhibition of Elipsa expression causes defective ciliogenesis in zebrafish (Omori et al., 2008
). In C. elegans, the Elipsa homolog DYF-11 translocates within sensory cilia via IFT (Kunitomo and Iino, 2008
), supporting the link between IFT and this putative binding partner of Rab8. Therefore, both functional and biochemical evidence implicating IFT in the transport of membrane proteins within the cilium is accumulating.
If ciliary membrane proteins indeed traffic into cilia with IFT complexes, an equally important consideration becomes how they disassociate from these complexes, lest they recycle back out of the organelle. The logical place to look for molecular regulators of IFT disassociation is at the tip of the cilium because this is where axonemal subunits are incorporated. The plus-end microtubule-binding protein EB1 localizes to the tip of the cilium (Pedersen, 2003), where it interacts with the retrograde complex protein IFT172 (Pedersen et al., 2005
). The ciliary tip is probably also the site where anterograde and retrograde IFT transport are coordinated. This coordination might involve the BBSome because inhibiting the expression of BBS proteins, which transit with IFT complexes in C. elegans, leads to uncoupling of the anterograde and retrograde movement (Ou et al., 2005
).
| Composition and sorting of ciliary membrane lipids |
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An association between lipid rafts and many other cilia-targeted proteins has also been described in other systems, including vertebrate photoreceptors (Senin et al., 2004
), Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Iomini et al., 2006
), mammalian spermatozoa (Travis et al., 2001
) and Leishmania major (Tull et al., 2004
). Similarly, certain proteins that are thought to be involved in targeting proteins to ciliary membranes have been shown to require protein-lipid interactions for their localization in non-ciliated cells. For example, the SNARE protein syntaxin 3, whose involvement in rhodopsin trafficking was discussed above (Mazelova et al., 2009b
), requires cholesterol for its clustering in lipid rafts at the plasma membrane of epithelial cells (Low, 2006). In a similar way, the localization of the exocyst in MDCK cells is mediated by a direct interaction with phosphatidylinositol (4,5)-bisphosphate (Liu et al., 2007
). Whether these same protein-lipid associations are involved in localizing syntaxin 3 and the exocyst to ciliary membranes remains to be determined.
Collectively, these findings illustrate the distinct lipid composition of the eukaryotic ciliary membrane relative to the plasma membrane and provide a potential mechanism for downstream protein recruitment. However, the mechanisms by which the cell establishes and maintains the discrete lipid composition of the ciliary membrane are unknown. It should also be noted that, although it is tempting to speculate that lipid-raft enrichment occurs upstream of protein sorting, it is equally plausible that ciliary proteins drive lipid-raft coalescence and their enrichment in ciliary membranes. These two models are not mutually exclusive, however, and perhaps the most likely scenario is that protein and lipid sorting have reciprocal effects on each other during the trafficking of these molecules to and within cilia. A major advance in this area was the finding that a transmembrane lipid-raft protein is sorted in the Golgi complex specifically into vesicles that are enriched in sphingolipids and sterols and that exhibit high liquid order by laurdan microscopy (Klemm et al., 2009
). This work indicates that lipid sorting and formation of vesicles with distinct lipid composition can occur in the trans-Golgi network. It is therefore reasonable to hypothesize that lipid-raft vesicles containing specific cargo can form here as well, a subset of which might be destined for the ciliary membrane. This notion is consistent with a targeted delivery model for the delivery of ciliary components.
| Concluding remarks |
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| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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