Pericentrin pivotal in primary cilia
Author(s) -
Rabiya S. Tuma
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
the journal of cell biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.414
H-Index - 380
eISSN - 1540-8140
pISSN - 0021-9525
DOI - 10.1083/jcb1665iti5
Subject(s) - centrosome , biology , cilium , intraflagellar transport , microbiology and biotechnology , ciliogenesis , microtubule , centriole , ciliopathy , motile cilium , tubulin , flagellum , genetics , gene , phenotype , cell cycle
The centrosome protein pericentrin acts as an anchor for primary cilia formation in human cells, according to a report by Jurczyk et al. (page 637). The finding further unites the centrosome and primary cilia, both of which are based around centrioles, and both of which use pericentrin as an anchor for other proteins.Figure Pericentrin (green) is needed to build primary cilia (red).The authors show that pericentrin is located not only at centrosomes but also around the centrioles at the base of primary and motile cilia. After depletion of most pericentrin using RNAi, primary cilia failed to assemble, but centrosomes could still nucleate microtubules. The divergent outcomes may result from selective depletion of pericentrin's large isoform by RNAi, with remaining smaller isoforms perhaps acting in centrosomes. Depletion of pericentrin also disrupted the localization of both the intraflagellar transport (IFT) proteins that help build cilia and PC2, a cation channel important in ciliary signaling. Furthermore, depletion of IFT proteins with RNAi caused pericentrin mislocalization and disrupted primary cilia formation. Endogenous pericentrin copurifies and coimmunoprecipitates with IFT proteins. Additional studies are needed to understand exactly how this complex acts to direct primary cilia formation. The association is certainly reminiscent of pericentrin's function in centrosomes, where it is needed to anchor the γ-tubulin ring complexes that nucleate microtubules. ▪
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