Although ubiquitously present, the relevance of cilia for vertebrate development and health has long been underrated. However, the aberration or dysfunction of ciliary structures or components results in a large heterogeneous group of disorders in mammals, termed ciliopathies. The majority of human ciliopathy cases are caused by malfunction of the ciliary dynein motor ac-tivity, powering retrograde intraflagellar transport (enabled by the cytoplasmic dynein-2 complex) or axonemal movement (axonemal dynein complexes). Despite a partially shared evolutionary developmental path and shared ciliary localization, the cytoplasmic dynein-2 and axonemal dynein functions are markedly different: while cytoplasmic dynein-2 complex dysfunction results in an ul-tra-rare syndromal skeleto-renal phenotype with a high lethality, axonemal dynein dysfunction is associated with a motile cilia dysfunction disorder, primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) or Kartagener syndrome, causing recurrent airway infection, degenerative lung disease, laterality defects, and in-fertility. In this review, we provide an overview of ciliary dynein complex compositions, their func-tions, clinical disease hallmarks of ciliary dynein disorders, presumed underlying pathomecha-nisms, and novel developments in the field.
CITATION STYLE
Antony, D., Brunner, H. G., & Schmidts, M. (2021). Ciliary dyneins and dynein related ciliopathies. Cells, 10(8). https://doi.org/10.3390/cells10081885
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