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1.
Cells Dev ; 170: 203791, 2022 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35561956

ABSTRACT

Mechanical strain can act as a global cue to orient the core planar cell polarity pathway (Fz-PCP) in developing epithelia, but how strain directs a Fz-PCP vector is not known. Here we use live cell imaging of apical microtubules (MTs) and components of the Fz-PCP pathway to analyze epithelial cells in Xenopus embryos as they respond to anisotropic mechanical strain and form a Fz-PCP axis. We find that a Fz-PCP axis can be detected approximately 40 min after the application of strain. By contrast, the density and length of apical MTs increases rapidly (5-10 min) in response to strain, independently of Fz-PCP. These early-forming apical MTs are planar polarized: they align to the strain axis and display a marked bias in plus-end orientation that invariably points towards the cell edge opposite the direction of strain application. We show that these MTs can promote the vectorial transport of Dvl3-GFP containing vesicles along the apical surface in a directed manner, perhaps explaining why PCP signaling fails when MTs are disrupted. Finally, we provide evidence that the Fz-PCP axis feeds back after an hour to stabilize oriented apical MTs. These results provide insights into how mechanical strain acts as a developmental cue within the appropriate time frame and with the appropriate vector to promote planar axis formation.


Subject(s)
Cell Polarity , Microtubules , Animals , Cell Polarity/physiology , Epithelial Cells , Microtubules/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Xenopus laevis
2.
Sci Adv ; 8(13): eabm7538, 2022 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35363516

ABSTRACT

Massive centriole amplification during multiciliated cell (MCC) differentiation is a notable example of organelle biogenesis. This process is thought to be enabled by a derived cell cycle state, but the key cell cycle components required for centriole amplification in MCC progenitors remain poorly defined. Here, we show that emi2 (fbxo43) expression is up-regulated and acts in MCC progenitors after cell cycle exit to transiently inhibit anaphase-promoting complex/cyclosome (APC/C)cdh1 activity. We find that this inhibition is required for the phosphorylation and activation of a key cell cycle kinase, plk1, which acts, in turn, to promote different steps required for centriole amplification and basal body formation, including centriole disengagement, apical migration, and maturation into basal bodies. This emi2-APC/C-plk1 axis is also required to down-regulate gene expression essential for centriole amplification after differentiation is complete. These results identify an emi2-APC/C-plk1 axis that promotes and then terminates centriole assembly and basal body formation during MCC differentiation.

3.
Sci Rep ; 8(1): 12369, 2018 08 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30120325

ABSTRACT

Multiciliated cells (MCCs) are specialized epithelial cells that project hundreds of motile cilia. To form these cilia, MCCs differentiate by dramatically expanding centriole number, using assembly factors required for centriole duplication during the cell cycle and multiple, novel assembly sites, called the deuterosome. The small coiled-coil protein, Multicilin, acting in a complex with the E2F proteins can initiate multiciliated cell differentiation, but reportedly only in a limited range of epithelial progenitors. To examine the nature of this restricted activity, we analyzed Multicilin activity in primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts (MEFs), a cell type distant from the epithelial lineages where MCCs normally arise. We show that Multicilin transcriptional activity is markedly attenuated in MEFs, where it induces only limited centriole expansion in a small fraction of cells. We further show that this transcriptional block is largely bypassed by expressing Multicilin along with a form of E2f4 where a generic activation domain from HSV1 VP16 (E2f4VP16) is fused to the carboxy terminus. MEFs respond to Multicilin and E2f4VP16 by undergoing massive centriole expansion via the deuterosome pathway, recapitulating a temporal sequence of organelle biogenesis that occurs in epithelial progenitors during MCC differentiation. These results suggest that the pattern of organelle biogenesis occurring in differentiating MCCs is largely determined by the transcriptional changes induced by Multicilin.


Subject(s)
Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , E2F4 Transcription Factor/metabolism , Fibroblasts/cytology , Fibroblasts/metabolism , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Cell Cycle Proteins/genetics , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Cell Differentiation/physiology , Cells, Cultured , E2F4 Transcription Factor/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental/physiology , HeLa Cells , Humans , Immunoblotting , Immunohistochemistry , Immunoprecipitation , Mice , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors
4.
Dev Cell ; 45(3): 316-330.e4, 2018 05 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29738711

ABSTRACT

The Xenopus left-right organizer (LRO) breaks symmetry along the left-right axis of the early embryo by producing and sensing directed ciliary flow as a patterning cue. To carry out this process, the LRO contains different ciliated cell types that vary in cilia length, whether they are motile or sensory, and how they position their cilia along the anterior-posterior (A-P) planar axis. Here, we show that these different cilia features are specified in the prospective LRO during gastrulation, based on anisotropic mechanical strain that is oriented along the A-P axis, and graded in levels along the medial-lateral axis. Strain instructs ciliated cell differentiation by acting on a mesodermal prepattern present at blastula stages, involving foxj1. We propose that differential strain is a graded, developmental cue, linking the establishment of an A-P planar axis to cilia length, motility, and planar location during formation of the Xenopus LRO.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/physiology , Cell Movement/physiology , Cell Polarity/physiology , Cilia/physiology , Organizers, Embryonic/physiology , Stress, Physiological/physiology , Xenopus laevis/physiology , Animals , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/physiology , Female , Functional Laterality , Gastrulation , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Male , Mesoderm/cytology , Mesoderm/physiology , Signal Transduction , Xenopus Proteins/genetics , Xenopus Proteins/metabolism
6.
PLoS Genet ; 13(1): e1006538, 2017 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28103240

ABSTRACT

Cooperative transcription factor binding at cis-regulatory sites in the genome drives robust eukaryotic gene expression, and many such sites must be coordinated to produce coherent transcriptional programs. The transcriptional program leading to motile cilia formation requires members of the DNA-binding forkhead (Fox) and Rfx transcription factor families and these factors co-localize to cilia gene promoters, but it is not clear how many cilia genes are regulated by these two factors, whether these factors act directly or indirectly, or how these factors act with specificity in the context of a 3-dimensional genome. Here, we use genome-wide approaches to show that cilia genes reside at the boundaries of topological domains and that these areas have low enhancer density. We show that the transcription factors Foxj1 and Rfx2 binding occurs in the promoters of more cilia genes than other known cilia transcription factors and that while Rfx2 binds directly to promoters and enhancers equally, Foxj1 prefers direct binding to enhancers and is stabilized at promoters by Rfx2. Finally, we show that Rfx2 and Foxj1 lie at the anchor endpoints of chromatin loops, suggesting that target genes are activated when Foxj1 bound at distal sites is recruited via a loop created by Rfx2 binding at both sites. We speculate that the primary function of Rfx2 is to stabilize distal enhancers with proximal promoters by operating as a scaffolding factor, bringing key regulatory domains bound by Foxj1 into close physical proximity and enabling coordinated cilia gene expression.


Subject(s)
Chromatin/metabolism , Forkhead Transcription Factors/metabolism , Regulatory Factor X Transcription Factors/metabolism , Transcriptional Activation , Xenopus Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Chromatin/chemistry , Cilia/metabolism , Promoter Regions, Genetic , Protein Binding , Skin/cytology , Skin/metabolism , Species Specificity , Xenopus
7.
Development ; 143(24): 4654-4664, 2016 12 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27864379

ABSTRACT

Multiciliated cell (MCC) differentiation involves extensive organelle biogenesis required to extend hundreds of motile cilia. Key transcriptional regulators known to drive the gene expression required for this organelle biogenesis are activated by the related coiled-coil proteins Multicilin and Gemc1. Here we identify foxn4 as a new downstream target of Multicilin required for MCC differentiation in Xenopus skin. When Foxn4 activity is inhibited in Xenopus embryos, MCCs show transient ciliogenesis defects similar to those seen in mutants of Foxj1, a known key regulator of genes required for motile ciliation. RNAseq analysis indicates that Foxn4 co-activates some Foxj1 target genes strongly and many Foxj1 targets weakly. ChIPseq suggests that whereas Foxn4 and Foxj1 frequently bind to different targets at distal enhancers, they largely bind together at MCC gene promoters. Consistent with this co-regulation, cilia extension by MCCs is more severely compromised in foxn4 and foxj1 double mutants than in single mutants. In contrast to Foxj1, Foxn4 is not required to extend a single motile cilium by cells involved in left-right patterning. These results indicate that Foxn4 complements Foxj1 transcriptionally during MCC differentiation, thereby shaping the levels of gene expression required for the timely and complete biogenesis of multiple motile cilia.


Subject(s)
Cilia/metabolism , Forkhead Transcription Factors/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Skin/embryology , Xenopus Proteins/genetics , Xenopus laevis/embryology , Animals , Basal Bodies/physiology , CRISPR-Cas Systems/genetics , Carrier Proteins/genetics , Cell Cycle Proteins , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Cell Differentiation/physiology , DNA-Binding Proteins/genetics , Forkhead Transcription Factors/antagonists & inhibitors , Forkhead Transcription Factors/metabolism , Morpholinos/genetics , Nerve Tissue Proteins/genetics , Xenopus Proteins/antagonists & inhibitors , Xenopus Proteins/metabolism
8.
Hum Mutat ; 37(4): 396-405, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26777464

ABSTRACT

Reduced generation of multiple motile cilia (RGMC) is a novel chronic destructive airway disease within the group of mucociliary clearance disorders with only few cases reported. Mutations in two genes, CCNO and MCIDAS, have been identified as a cause of this disease, both leading to a greatly reduced number of cilia and causing impaired mucociliary clearance. This study was designed to identify the prevalence of CCNO mutations in Israel and further delineate the clinical characteristics of RGMC. We analyzed 170 families with mucociliary clearance disorders originating from Israel for mutations in CCNO and identified two novel mutations (c.165delC, p.Gly56Alafs*38; c.638T>C, p.Leu213Pro) and two known mutations in 15 individuals from 10 families (6% prevalence). Pathogenicity of the missense mutation (c.638T>C, p.Leu213Pro) was demonstrated by functional analyses in Xenopus. Combining these 15 patients with the previously reported CCNO case reports revealed rapid deterioration in lung function, an increased prevalence of hydrocephalus (10%) as well as increased female infertility (22%). Consistent with these findings, we demonstrate that CCNO expression is present in murine ependyma and fallopian tubes. CCNO is mutated more frequently than expected from the rare previous clinical case reports, leads to severe clinical manifestations, and should therefore be considered an important differential diagnosis of mucociliary clearance disorders.


Subject(s)
Ciliary Motility Disorders/diagnosis , Ciliary Motility Disorders/genetics , DNA Glycosylases/genetics , Genetic Variation , Animals , DNA Glycosylases/metabolism , DNA Mutational Analysis , Diagnosis, Differential , Female , Frameshift Mutation , Genetic Association Studies , Genetic Loci , Genetic Testing , Humans , Male , Mice , Mutation , Mutation, Missense , Phenotype , Protein Transport , Radiography, Thoracic , Respiratory Function Tests , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Xenopus laevis
9.
Curr Biol ; 25(21): 2774-2784, 2015 Nov 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26441348

ABSTRACT

Epithelia containing multiciliated cells align beating cilia along a common planar axis specified by the conserved planar cell polarity (PCP) pathway. Specification of the planar axis is also thought to require a long-range cue to align the axis globally, but the nature of this cue in ciliated and other epithelia remains poorly understood. We examined this issue using the Xenopus larval skin, where ciliary flow aligns to the anterior-posterior (A-P) axis. We first show that a planar axis initially arises in the developing skin during gastrulation, based on the appearance of polarized apical microtubules and cell junctions with increased levels of stable PCP components. This axis also arises in severely ventralized embryos, despite their deficient embryonic patterning. Because ventralized embryos still gastrulate, producing a mechanical force that strains the developing skin along the A-P axis, we asked whether this strain alone drives global planar patterning. Isolated skin explanted before gastrulation lacks strain and fails to acquire a global planar axis but responds to exogenous strain by undergoing cell elongation, forming polarized apical microtubules, and aligning stable components of the PCP pathway orthogonal to the axis of strain. The planar axis in embryos can be redirected by applying exogenous strain during a critical period around gastrulation. Finally, we provide evidence that apical microtubules and the PCP pathway interact to align the planar axis. These results indicate that oriented tissue strain generated by the gastrulating mesoderm plays a major role in determining the global axis of planar polarity of the developing skin.


Subject(s)
Cell Polarity/physiology , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Stress, Physiological/physiology , Animals , Body Patterning/physiology , Cilia/metabolism , Gastrulation , Mesoderm/metabolism , Microtubules/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Skin/cytology , Skin/metabolism , Xenopus laevis
10.
Nat Commun ; 5: 4418, 2014 Jul 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25048963

ABSTRACT

Reduced generation of multiple motile cilia (RGMC) is a rare mucociliary clearance disorder. Affected persons suffer from recurrent infections of upper and lower airways because of highly reduced numbers of multiple motile respiratory cilia. Here we report recessive loss-of-function and missense mutations in MCIDAS-encoding Multicilin, which was shown to promote the early steps of multiciliated cell differentiation in Xenopus. MCIDAS mutant respiratory epithelial cells carry only one or two cilia per cell, which lack ciliary motility-related proteins (DNAH5; CCDC39) as seen in primary ciliary dyskinesia. Consistent with this finding, FOXJ1-regulating axonemal motor protein expression is absent in respiratory cells of MCIDAS mutant individuals. CCNO, when mutated known to cause RGMC, is also absent in MCIDAS mutant respiratory cells, consistent with its downstream activity. Thus, our findings identify Multicilin as a key regulator of CCNO/FOXJ1 for human multiciliated cell differentiation, and highlight the 5q11 region containing CCNO and MCIDAS as a locus underlying RGMC.


Subject(s)
Cell Cycle Proteins/genetics , Ciliary Motility Disorders/genetics , Mutation , Nuclear Proteins/genetics , Adult , Cdc20 Proteins/genetics , Cdc20 Proteins/metabolism , Cell Cycle Proteins/metabolism , Cell Differentiation/genetics , Chromosomes, Human, Pair 5 , Cilia/pathology , Cilia/ultrastructure , Ciliary Motility Disorders/etiology , DNA Glycosylases/genetics , DNA Glycosylases/metabolism , Female , Forkhead Transcription Factors/genetics , Forkhead Transcription Factors/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation , Humans , Kartagener Syndrome/genetics , Male , Microscopy, Electron, Transmission , Mucociliary Clearance/genetics , Nuclear Proteins/metabolism , Pedigree , Transcription Factors , Young Adult
11.
Genes Dev ; 28(13): 1461-71, 2014 Jul 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24934224

ABSTRACT

Multiciliate cells employ hundreds of motile cilia to produce fluid flow, which they nucleate and extend by first assembling hundreds of centrioles. In most cells, entry into the cell cycle allows centrioles to undergo a single round of duplication, but in differentiating multiciliate cells, massive centriole assembly occurs in G0 by a process initiated by a small coiled-coil protein, Multicilin. Here we show that Multicilin acts by forming a ternary complex with E2f4 or E2f5 and Dp1 that binds and activates most of the genes required for centriole biogenesis, while other cell cycle genes remain off. This complex also promotes the deuterosome pathway of centriole biogenesis by activating the expression of deup1 but not its paralog, cep63. Finally, we show that this complex is disabled by mutations in human Multicilin that cause a severe congenital mucociliary clearance disorder due to reduced generation of multiple cilia. By coopting the E2f regulation of cell cycle genes, Multicilin drives massive centriole assembly in epithelial progenitors in a manner required for multiciliate cell differentiation.


Subject(s)
Centrioles/metabolism , E2F Transcription Factors/metabolism , Xenopus Proteins/metabolism , Animals , E2F Transcription Factors/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Mice , Mutation/genetics , Protein Binding/genetics , Skin/cytology , Skin/metabolism , Transcription Factor DP1/metabolism , Xenopus Proteins/genetics , Xenopus laevis/genetics , Xenopus laevis/metabolism
12.
Nat Genet ; 46(6): 646-51, 2014 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24747639

ABSTRACT

Using a whole-exome sequencing strategy, we identified recessive CCNO (encoding cyclin O) mutations in 16 individuals suffering from chronic destructive lung disease due to insufficient airway clearance. Respiratory epithelial cells showed a marked reduction in the number of multiple motile cilia (MMC) covering the cell surface. The few residual cilia that correctly expressed axonemal motor proteins were motile and did not exhibit obvious beating defects. Careful subcellular analyses as well as in vitro ciliogenesis experiments in CCNO-mutant cells showed defective mother centriole generation and placement. Morpholino-based knockdown of the Xenopus ortholog of CCNO also resulted in reduced MMC and centriole numbers in embryonic epidermal cells. CCNO is expressed in the apical cytoplasm of multiciliated cells and acts downstream of multicilin, which governs the generation of multiciliated cells. To our knowledge, CCNO is the first reported gene linking an inherited human disease to reduced MMC generation due to a defect in centriole amplification and migration.


Subject(s)
Cilia/metabolism , DNA Glycosylases/genetics , Kartagener Syndrome/genetics , Mucociliary Clearance/genetics , Mutation , Adolescent , Adult , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Cell Movement , Centrioles/metabolism , Child , Child, Preschool , Cytoplasm/metabolism , Female , Humans , Male , Mice , Models, Genetic , Molecular Sequence Data , Pedigree , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Xenopus laevis
13.
Development ; 140(20): 4277-86, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24048590

ABSTRACT

The transcriptional control of primary cilium formation and ciliary motility are beginning to be understood, but little is known about the transcriptional programs that control cilium number and other structural and functional specializations. One of the most intriguing ciliary specializations occurs in multiciliated cells (MCCs), which amplify their centrioles to nucleate hundreds of cilia per cell, instead of the usual monocilium. Here we report that the transcription factor MYB, which promotes S phase and drives cycling of a variety of progenitor cells, is expressed in postmitotic epithelial cells of the mouse airways and ependyma destined to become MCCs. MYB is expressed early in multiciliogenesis, as progenitors exit the cell cycle and amplify their centrioles, then switches off as MCCs mature. Conditional inactivation of Myb in the developing airways blocks or delays centriole amplification and expression of FOXJ1, a transcription factor that controls centriole docking and ciliary motility, and airways fail to become fully ciliated. We provide evidence that MYB acts in a conserved pathway downstream of Notch signaling and multicilin, a protein related to the S-phase regulator geminin, and upstream of FOXJ1. MYB can activate endogenous Foxj1 expression and stimulate a cotransfected Foxj1 reporter in heterologous cells, and it can drive the complete multiciliogenesis program in Xenopus embryonic epidermis. We conclude that MYB has an early, crucial and conserved role in multiciliogenesis, and propose that it promotes a novel S-like phase in which centriole amplification occurs uncoupled from DNA synthesis, and then drives later steps of multiciliogenesis through induction of Foxj1.


Subject(s)
Centrioles/metabolism , Cilia/metabolism , Forkhead Transcription Factors/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-myb/metabolism , Animals , Brain/embryology , Brain/metabolism , Cell Differentiation , Cell Movement , Cells, Cultured , Centrioles/genetics , Cilia/genetics , Ependyma/embryology , Ependyma/metabolism , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Forkhead Transcription Factors/biosynthesis , Lung/embryology , Lung/metabolism , Mice/embryology , Mice, Transgenic , Signal Transduction , Trachea/embryology , Trachea/metabolism , Xenopus laevis/embryology
14.
Wiley Interdiscip Rev Dev Biol ; 2(4): 479-98, 2013 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24014419

ABSTRACT

In vertebrates, the development of the nervous system is triggered by signals from a powerful 'organizing' region of the early embryo during gastrulation. This phenomenon--neural induction--was originally discovered and given conceptual definition by experimental embryologists working with amphibian embryos. Work on the molecular circuitry underlying neural induction, also in the same model system, demonstrated that elimination of ongoing transforming growth factor-ß (TGFß) signaling in the ectoderm is the hallmark of anterior neural-fate acquisition. This observation is the basis of the 'default' model of neural induction. Endogenous neural inducers are secreted proteins that act to inhibit TGFß ligands in the dorsal ectoderm. In the ventral ectoderm, where the signaling ligands escape the inhibitors, a non-neural fate is induced. Inhibition of the TGFß pathway has now been demonstrated to be sufficient to directly induce neural fate in mammalian embryos as well as pluripotent mouse and human embryonic stem cells. Hence the molecular process that delineates neural from non-neural ectoderm is conserved across a broad range of organisms in the evolutionary tree. The availability of embryonic stem cells from mouse, primates, and humans will facilitate further understanding of the role of signaling pathways and their downstream mediators in neural induction in vertebrate embryos.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning , Embryonic Induction , Neural Plate/metabolism , Neurogenesis , Animals , Genes, Developmental , Humans , Neural Plate/embryology , Neural Stem Cells/cytology , Neural Stem Cells/metabolism , Transforming Growth Factor beta/genetics , Transforming Growth Factor beta/metabolism , Vertebrates/embryology
15.
Development ; 140(16): 3468-77, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23900544

ABSTRACT

Multiciliate cells (MCCs) are highly specialized epithelial cells that employ hundreds of motile cilia to produce a vigorous directed flow in a variety of organ systems. The production of this flow requires the establishment of planar cell polarity (PCP) whereby MCCs align hundreds of beating cilia along a common planar axis. The planar axis of cilia in MCCs is known to be established via the PCP pathway and hydrodynamic cues, but the downstream steps required for cilia orientation remain poorly defined. Here, we describe a new component of cilia orientation, based on the phenotypic analysis of an uncharacterized coiled-coil protein, called bbof1. We show that the expression of bbof1 is induced during the early phases of MCC differentiation by the master regulator foxj1. MCC differentiation and ciliogenesis occurs normally in embryos where bbof1 activity is reduced, but cilia orientation is severely disrupted. We show that cilia in bbof1 mutants can still respond to patterning and hydrodynamic cues, but lack the ability to maintain their precise orientation. Misexpression of bbof1 promotes cilia alignment, even in the absence of flow or in embryos where microtubules and actin filaments are disrupted. Bbof1 appears to mediate cilia alignment by localizing to a polar structure adjacent to the basal body. Together, these results suggest that bbof1 is a basal body component required in MCCs to align and maintain cilia orientation in response to flow.


Subject(s)
Cilia/physiology , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Movement , Xenopus laevis/metabolism , Actins/metabolism , Animals , Axoneme/metabolism , Body Patterning , Cell Differentiation , Cilia/metabolism , Embryo, Nonmammalian/drug effects , Embryo, Nonmammalian/metabolism , Embryo, Nonmammalian/physiology , Forkhead Transcription Factors/genetics , Forkhead Transcription Factors/metabolism , Hydrodynamics , Nocodazole/pharmacology , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Xenopus Proteins/genetics , Xenopus Proteins/metabolism , Xenopus laevis/physiology
16.
Development ; 138(4): 705-14, 2011 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21266406

ABSTRACT

Specialized epithelial cells in the amphibian skin play important roles in ion transport, but how they arise developmentally is largely unknown. Here we show that proton-secreting cells (PSCs) differentiate in the X. laevis larval skin soon after gastrulation, based on the expression of a `kidney-specific' form of the H(+)v-ATPase that localizes to the plasma membrane, orthologs of the Cl(-)/HCO(-)(3) antiporters ae1 and pendrin, and two isoforms of carbonic anhydrase. Like PSCs in other species, we show that the expression of these genes is likely to be driven by an ortholog of foxi1, which is also sufficient to promote the formation of PSC precursors. Strikingly, the PSCs form in the skin as two distinct subtypes that resemble the alpha- and beta-intercalated cells of the kidney. The alpha-subtype expresses ae1 and localizes H(+)v-ATPases to the apical plasma membrane, whereas the beta-subtype expresses pendrin and localizes the H(+)v-ATPase cytosolically or basolaterally. These two subtypes are specified during early PSC differentiation by a binary switch that can be regulated by Notch signaling and by the expression of ubp1, a transcription factor of the grainyhead family. These results have implications for how PSCs are specified in vertebrates and become functionally heterogeneous.


Subject(s)
Ion Pumps/metabolism , Skin/metabolism , Xenopus laevis/metabolism , Animals , Cell Communication , Cell Differentiation , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , Ion Pumps/genetics , Receptors, Notch/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Skin/cytology , Skin/embryology , Transcription Factors/genetics , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Xenopus Proteins/genetics , Xenopus Proteins/metabolism , Xenopus laevis/embryology , Xenopus laevis/genetics
17.
PLoS One ; 5(2): e8999, 2010 Feb 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20126399

ABSTRACT

Left-right asymmetry in vertebrates is initiated in an early embryonic structure called the ventral node in human and mouse, and the gastrocoel roof plate (GRP) in the frog. Within these structures, each epithelial cell bears a single motile cilium, and the concerted beating of these cilia produces a leftward fluid flow that is required to initiate left-right asymmetric gene expression. The leftward fluid flow is thought to result from the posterior tilt of the cilia, which protrude from near the posterior portion of each cell's apical surface. The cells, therefore, display a morphological planar polarization. Planar cell polarity (PCP) is manifested as the coordinated, polarized orientation of cells within epithelial sheets, or as directional cell migration and intercalation during convergent extension. A set of evolutionarily conserved proteins regulates PCP. Here, we provide evidence that vertebrate PCP proteins regulate planar polarity in the mouse ventral node and in the Xenopus gastrocoel roof plate. Asymmetric anterior localization of VANGL1 and PRICKLE2 (PK2) in mouse ventral node cells indicates that these cells are planar polarized by a conserved molecular mechanism. A weakly penetrant Vangl1 mutant phenotype suggests that compromised Vangl1 function may be associated with left-right laterality defects. Stronger functional evidence comes from the Xenopus GRP, where we show that perturbation of VANGL2 protein function disrupts the posterior localization of motile cilia that is required for leftward fluid flow, and causes aberrant expression of the left side-specific gene Nodal. The observation of anterior-posterior PCP in the mouse and in Xenopus embryonic organizers reflects a strong evolutionary conservation of this mechanism that is important for body plan determination.


Subject(s)
Body Patterning/physiology , Cilia/physiology , Embryo, Mammalian/physiology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/physiology , Animals , Body Patterning/genetics , Carrier Proteins/genetics , Carrier Proteins/physiology , Cell Line , Cell Polarity , Cilia/metabolism , Embryo, Mammalian/cytology , Embryo, Mammalian/embryology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/embryology , Female , Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental , In Situ Hybridization , LIM Domain Proteins , Male , Membrane Proteins/genetics , Membrane Proteins/physiology , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Inbred Strains , Mice, Knockout , Xenopus laevis
18.
Genes Dev ; 23(17): 2046-59, 2009 Sep 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19656802

ABSTRACT

Centrioles are subcellular organelles composed of a ninefold symmetric microtubule array that perform two important functions: (1) They build centrosomes that organize the microtubule cytoskeleton, and (2) they template cilia, microtubule-based projections with sensory and motile functions. We identified HYLS-1, a widely conserved protein, based on its direct interaction with the core centriolar protein SAS-4. HYLS-1 localization to centrioles requires SAS-4 and, like SAS-4, HYLS-1 is stably incorporated into the outer centriole wall. Unlike SAS-4, HYLS-1 is dispensable for centriole assembly and centrosome function in cell division. Instead, HYLS-1 plays an essential role in cilia formation that is conserved between Caenorhabditis elegans and vertebrates. A single amino acid change in human HYLS1 leads to a perinatal lethal disorder termed hydrolethalus syndrome, and we show that this mutation impairs HYLS-1 function in ciliogenesis. HYLS-1 is required for the apical targeting/anchoring of centrioles at the plasma membrane but not for the intraflagellar transport-dependent extension of the ciliary axoneme. These findings classify hydrolethalus syndrome as a severe human ciliopathy and shed light on the dual functionality of centrioles, defining the first stably incorporated centriolar protein that is not required for centriole assembly but instead confers on centrioles the capacity to initiate ciliogenesis.


Subject(s)
Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/metabolism , Caenorhabditis elegans/cytology , Caenorhabditis elegans/metabolism , Centrioles/metabolism , Cilia/physiology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , Behavior, Animal/physiology , Caenorhabditis elegans/genetics , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/chemistry , Caenorhabditis elegans Proteins/genetics , Cell Division , Embryo, Nonmammalian/cytology , Embryo, Nonmammalian/physiology , Humans , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutation/genetics , Neurons/metabolism , Protein Transport , Sequence Alignment , Transcription Factors/metabolism , Xenopus laevis/genetics , Xenopus laevis/metabolism
19.
Curr Biol ; 19(11): 924-9, 2009 Jun 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19427216

ABSTRACT

Planar cell polarity (PCP) is a property of epithelial tissues where cellular structures coordinately orient along a two-dimensional plane lying orthogonal to the axis of apical-basal polarity. PCP is particularly striking in tissues where multiciliate cells generate a directed fluid flow, as seen, for example, in the ciliated epithelia lining the respiratory airways or the ventricles of the brain. To produce directed flow, ciliated cells orient along a common planar axis in a direction set by tissue patterning, but how this is achieved in any ciliated epithelium is unknown. Here, we show that the planar orientation of Xenopus multiciliate cells is disrupted when components in the PCP-signaling pathway are altered non-cell-autonomously. We also show that wild-type ciliated cells located at a mutant clone border reorient toward cells with low Vangl2 or high Frizzled activity and away from those with high Vangl2 activity. These results indicate that the PCP pathway provides directional non-cell-autonomous cues to orient ciliated cells as they differentiate, thus playing a critical role in establishing directed ciliary flow.


Subject(s)
Cell Polarity , Skin/cytology , Animals , Body Patterning/physiology , Cilia/ultrastructure , Immunohistochemistry , Larva/cytology , Larva/ultrastructure , Microscopy, Confocal , Signal Transduction , Skin/ultrastructure , Time Factors , Xenopus , Xenopus Proteins/genetics , Xenopus Proteins/metabolism , Xenopus Proteins/physiology
20.
Nat Genet ; 40(12): 1454-60, 2008 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19011629

ABSTRACT

It has been proposed that ciliated cells that produce a leftward fluid flow mediate left-right patterning in many vertebrate embryos. The cilia on these cells combine features of primary sensory and motile cilia, but how this cilia subtype is specified is unknown. We address this issue by analyzing the Xenopus and zebrafish homologs of Foxj1, a forkhead transcription factor necessary for ciliogenesis in multiciliated cells of the mouse. We show that the cilia that underlie left-right patterning on the Xenopus gastrocoel roof plate (GRP) and zebrafish Kupffer's vesicle are severely shortened or fail to form in Foxj1 morphants. We also show that misexpressing Foxj1 is sufficient to induce ectopic GRP-like cilia formation in frog embryos. Microarray analysis indicates that Xenopus Foxj1 induces the formation of cilia by upregulating the expression of motile cilia genes. These results indicate that Foxj1 is a critical determinant in the specification of cilia used in left-right patterning.


Subject(s)
Cilia/metabolism , Forkhead Transcription Factors/metabolism , Xenopus Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Body Patterning , Forkhead Transcription Factors/genetics , Xenopus/embryology , Xenopus/genetics , Xenopus Proteins/genetics , Zebrafish/embryology , Zebrafish/genetics , Zebrafish Proteins
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