The directed beating of motile cilia is a critical aspect of tissue function in a variety of developmental and physiological contexts including proper neural development, egg migration through the oviduct and mucus clearance in the respiratory tract. The loss of cilia motility results in a wide range of phenotypes including hydrocephaly, infertility, situs inversus, and respiratory dysfunction. We have developed the ciliated epithelium of Xenopus larval skin as a model system to ask: How do ciliated cells generate hundreds of cilia and how do they orient those cilia in an organized way? We have developed confocal light microscopic methods for visualizing specific aspects of ciliated cells in the developing skin of Xenopus embryos. These methods allow us to visualize the massive centriole duplication required to generate the approximately 150 basal bodies that nucleate the cilia. Additionally, we can visualize and accurately quantify the cytoskeletal interactions that facilitate the establishment of cilia orientation. Using these methods we will address: (1.) The regulation of microtubule dynamics during the polarization of ciliated epithelia, (2.) The regulation of actin dynamics during the polarization of ciliated epithelia, and (3.) The regulation of centriole amplification. Our results will provide a long sought after missing link between polarity cues and the regulation of cytoskeletal dynamics during cellular polarization. While our work is focused on ciliated epithelia, it will provide a clear understanding of the downstream regulation of polarity cues that is important in numerous developmental and disease contexts. Additionally, defects in centriole duplication highly correlate with late stage cancer progression, indicating an uncoupling of duplication from the cell cycle. Our work will address the question of how centrioles can be generated in the absence of the cell cycle cues.

Public Health Relevance

The ability to generate directed fluid flow is essential to the function of numerous tissues, most notably the respiratory tract and the female reproductive tract. Our goal is to understand how these tissues generate and polarize cellular structures called cilia, which are responsible for producing flow.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of General Medical Sciences (NIGMS)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01GM089970-08
Application #
9250161
Study Section
Development - 2 Study Section (DEV2)
Program Officer
Hoodbhoy, Tanya
Project Start
2010-04-02
Project End
2019-03-31
Budget Start
2017-04-01
Budget End
2018-03-31
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
2017
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
Northwestern University at Chicago
Department
Anatomy/Cell Biology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005436803
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60611
Kim, Sun K; Zhang, Siwei; Werner, Michael E et al. (2018) CLAMP/Spef1 regulates planar cell polarity signaling and asymmetric microtubule accumulation in the Xenopus ciliated epithelia. J Cell Biol 217:1633-1641
Werner, Michael; Del Castillo, Urko; Ventrella, Rosa et al. (2018) The small molecule AMBMP disrupts microtubule growth, ciliogenesis, cell polarity, and cell migration. Cytoskeleton (Hoboken) 75:450-457
Galati, Domenico F; Mitchell, Brian J; Pearson, Chad G (2016) Subdistal Appendages Stabilize the Ups and Downs of Ciliary Life. Dev Cell 39:387-389
Silva, Erica; Betleja, Ewelina; John, Emily et al. (2016) Ccdc11 is a novel centriolar satellite protein essential for ciliogenesis and establishment of left-right asymmetry. Mol Biol Cell 27:48-63
Vladar, Eszter K; Mitchell, Brian J (2016) It's a family act: the geminin triplets take center stage in motile ciliogenesis. EMBO J 35:904-6
Jaffe, Kimberly M; Grimes, Daniel T; Schottenfeld-Roames, Jodi et al. (2016) c21orf59/kurly Controls Both Cilia Motility and Polarization. Cell Rep 14:1841-9
Wong, Yao Liang; Anzola, John V; Davis, Robert L et al. (2015) Cell biology. Reversible centriole depletion with an inhibitor of Polo-like kinase 4. Science 348:1155-60
Zhang, Siwei; Mitchell, Brian J (2015) Centriole biogenesis and function in multiciliated cells. Methods Cell Biol 129:103-127
Werner, Michael E; Mitchell, Jennifer W; Putzbach, William et al. (2014) Radial intercalation is regulated by the Par complex and the microtubule-stabilizing protein CLAMP/Spef1. J Cell Biol 206:367-76
Werner, Michael E; Mitchell, Brian J (2013) Using Xenopus skin to study cilia development and function. Methods Enzymol 525:191-217

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