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Tracheal motile cilia in mice require CAMSAP3 for the formation of central microtubule pair and coordinated beating
Authors:Hiroko Saito  Fumiko Matsukawa-Usami  Toshihiko Fujimori  Toshiya Kimura  Takahiro Ide  Takaki Yamamoto  Tatsuo Shibata  Kenta Onoue  Satoko Okayama  Shigenobu Yonemura  Kazuyo Misaki  Yurina Soba  Yasutaka Kakui  Masamitsu Sato  Mika Toya  Masatoshi Takeichi
Abstract:Motile cilia of multiciliated epithelial cells undergo synchronized beating to produce fluid flow along the luminal surface of various organs. Each motile cilium consists of an axoneme and a basal body (BB), which are linked by a “transition zone” (TZ). The axoneme exhibits a characteristic 9+2 microtubule arrangement important for ciliary motion, but how this microtubule system is generated is not yet fully understood. Here we show that calmodulin-regulated spectrin-associated protein 3 (CAMSAP3), a protein that can stabilize the minus-end of a microtubule, concentrates at multiple sites of the cilium–BB complex, including the upper region of the TZ or the axonemal basal plate (BP) where the central pair of microtubules (CP) initiates. CAMSAP3 dysfunction resulted in loss of the CP and partial distortion of the BP, as well as the failure of multicilia to undergo synchronized beating. These findings suggest that CAMSAP3 plays pivotal roles in the formation or stabilization of the CP by localizing at the basal region of the axoneme and thereby supports the coordinated motion of multicilia in airway epithelial cells.
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