The hydrolethalus syndrome protein HYLS-1 regulates formation of the ciliary gate

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Abstract

Transition fibres (TFs), together with the transition zone (TZ), are basal ciliary structures thought to be crucial for cilium biogenesis and function by acting as a ciliary gate to regulate selective protein entry and exit. Here we demonstrate that the centriolar and basal body protein HYLS-1, the C. Elegans orthologue of hydrolethalus syndrome protein 1, is required for TF formation, TZ organization and ciliary gating. Loss of HYLS-1 compromises the docking and entry of intraflagellar transport (IFT) particles, ciliary gating for both membrane and soluble proteins, and axoneme assembly. Additional depletion of the TF component DYF-19 in hyls-1 mutants further exacerbates TZ anomalies and completely abrogates ciliogenesis. Our data support an important role for HYLS-1 and TFs in establishment of the ciliary gate and underline the importance of selective protein entry for cilia assembly.

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Wei, Q., Zhang, Y., Schouteden, C., Zhang, Y., Zhang, Q., Dong, J., … Hu, J. (2016). The hydrolethalus syndrome protein HYLS-1 regulates formation of the ciliary gate. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12437

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