WDR92 is required for axonemal dynein heavy chain stability in cytoplasm.

Mol Biol Cell

Department of Molecular Biology and Biophysics, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, CT 06030-3305.

Published: July 2019

WDR92 associates with a prefoldin-like cochaperone complex and known dynein assembly factors. WDR92 has been very highly conserved and has a phylogenetic signature consistent with it playing a role in motile ciliary assembly or activity. Knockdown of expression in planaria resulted in ciliary loss, reduced beat frequency and dyskinetic motion of the remaining ventral cilia. We have now identified a mutant that encodes a protein missing the last four WD repeats. The mutant builds only ∼0.7-μm cilia lacking both inner and outer dynein arms, but with intact doublet microtubules and central pair. When cytoplasmic extracts prepared by freeze/thaw from a control strain were fractionated by gel filtration, outer arm dynein components were present in several distinct high molecular weight complexes. In contrast, extracts almost completely lacked all three outer arm heavy chains, while the IFT dynein heavy chain was present in normal amounts. A double mutant builds ∼7-μm immotile flaccid cilia that completely lack dynein arms. These data indicate that WDR92 is a key assembly factor specifically required for the stability of axonemal dynein heavy chains in cytoplasm and suggest that cytoplasmic/IFT dynein heavy chains use a distinct folding pathway.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6727741PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1091/mbc.E19-03-0139DOI Listing

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