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A truncating mutation of Alms1 reduces the number of hypothalamic neuronal cilia in obese mice
Authors:Claire Z Larter  Chrystal Inglis  Michael A Silverman  Geoffrey C Farrell  Michel R Leroux
Institution:1. Liver Research Group, ANU Medical School at The Canberra Hospital, Canberra, ACT, Australia;2. Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada;3. Department of Biological Sciences, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada
Abstract:Primary cilia are ubiquitous cellular antennae whose dysfunction collectively causes various disorders, including vision and hearing impairment, as well as renal, skeletal, and central nervous system anomalies. One ciliopathy, Alström syndrome, is closely related to Bardet–Biedl syndrome (BBS), sharing amongst other phenotypic features morbid obesity. As the cellular and molecular links between weight regulation and cilia are poorly understood, we used the obese mouse strain foz/foz, bearing a truncating mutation in the Alström syndrome protein (Alms1), to help elucidate why it develops hyperphagia, leading to early onset obesity and metabolic anomalies. Our in vivo studies reveal that Alms1 localizes at the base of cilia in hypothalamic neurons, which are implicated in the control of satiety. Alms1 is lost from this location in foz/foz mice, coinciding with a strong postnatal reduction (~70%) in neurons displaying cilia marked with adenylyl cyclase 3 (AC3), a signaling protein implicated in obesity. Notably, the reduction in AC3‐bearing cilia parallels the decrease in cilia containing two appetite‐regulating proteins, Mchr1 and Sstr3, as well as another established Arl13b ciliary marker, consistent with progressive loss of cilia during development. Together, our results suggest that Alms1 maintains the function of neuronal cilia implicated in weight regulation by influencing the maintenance and/or stability of the organelle. Given that Mchr1 and Sstr3 localization to remaining cilia is maintained in foz/foz animals but known to be lost from BBS knockout mice, our findings suggest different molecular etiologies for the satiety defects associated with the Alström syndrome and BBS ciliopathies. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Develop Neurobiol, 2013
Keywords:primary cilium  hypothalamus  obesity  Alms1
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