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Composition, organization and mechanisms of the transition zone, a gate for the cilium

期刊

EMBO REPORTS
卷 23, 期 12, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.15252/embr.202255420

关键词

cilia; ciliary gate; ciliary trafficking; ciliopathies; transition zone

资金

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [MOP-142243, PJT-156042]
  2. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research (MSFHR)
  3. Michael Smith Health Research BC's Research Trainee Awards
  4. Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarships

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The transition zone (TZ) of the cilium acts as a diffusion barrier, ensuring ciliary autonomy and homeostasis by its unique complement and spatial organization of proteins, a protein picket fence, a specialized lipid microdomain, differential membrane curvature and thickness, and a size-selective molecular sieve. Understanding the TZ is important not only for illuminating essential aspects of human cell signaling, physiology, and development, but also for unraveling how TZ dysfunction contributes to ciliopathies affecting multiple organ systems.
The cilium evolved to provide the ancestral eukaryote with the ability to move and sense its environment. Acquiring these functions required the compartmentalization of a dynein-based motility apparatus and signaling proteins within a discrete subcellular organelle contiguous with the cytosol. Here, we explore the potential molecular mechanisms for how the proximal-most region of the cilium, termed transition zone (TZ), acts as a diffusion barrier for both membrane and soluble proteins and helps to ensure ciliary autonomy and homeostasis. These include a unique complement and spatial organization of proteins that span from the microtubule-based axoneme to the ciliary membrane; a protein picket fence; a specialized lipid microdomain; differential membrane curvature and thickness; and lastly, a size-selective molecular sieve. In addition, the TZ must be permissive for, and functionally integrates with, ciliary trafficking systems (including intraflagellar transport) that cross the barrier and make the ciliary compartment dynamic. The quest to understand the TZ continues and promises to not only illuminate essential aspects of human cell signaling, physiology, and development, but also to unravel how TZ dysfunction contributes to ciliopathies that affect multiple organ systems, including eyes, kidney, and brain.

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