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May 13, 2004
UCSD
Biologists Uncover Genetic Links To Broad Range
Of Human Disorders Resulting From Cilia Dysfunctions
By
Kim McDonald
Biologists
at the University of California, San Diego have discovered a number
of key genes that humans, mice, fruit flies and roundworms all need
to produce hair-like cellular protrusions known as cilia -- a structure
that when absent or defective in certain cells has been linked to
human infertility, blindness, kidney disease and lung dysfunction.
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Green
neurons at base of red sensory bristles on the thorax of
fruit fly. Click here
for high-res image
Credit: UCSD/Cell Press |
In
a paper featured on the cover of the May 14 issue of the journal
Cell, UCSD biologists headed by Charles S. Zuker, a professor
of biology and of neurosciences, and postdoctoral fellow Tomer Avidor-Reiss
report the identification of some 40 genes that play a role in cilia
formation, six of which, they discovered, are essential for the
assembly of this cell structure.
"These six
genes are fundamentally and universally important for any cell to
build cilia," says Zuker, who is also a Howard Hughes Medical Institute
investigator, "because if a cell doesn'thave all of them, it is
unable to grow cilia."
The discovery of these genes provides medical researchers
with a critical new tool to help in diagnosing genetic diseases
involving cilia dysfunction and possibly in developing drugs thatcan
minimize the health effects of such dysfunctions. .
"This
will provide the basic foundation for researchers to understand
how cilia form and thegenetic basis for so many of these human genetic
disorders," says Avidor-Reiss. "It is only recently that scientists
began to realize that there are links between cilia dysfunction
and a wide range of human genetic diseases. Now we have an exciting
collection of candidate genes."
In humans,
sperm navigate toward the egg by propelling themselves with a type
of cilia known as flagella. Defects in these whip-like cilia, result
in non-motile sperm and male infertility, and are probably the most
commonly known type of cilia dysfunctions. Other widely known human
cilia disorders include the pulmonary diseases caused by defective
respiratory cilia, which cleanse the lungs by sweeping mucous and
trapped particles into the throat, and the vision problems or blindness
due to defective cilia in the eye's photoreceptors.
In recent years,
that list has grown as medical researchers discovered that many
human genetic ailments affecting multiple organs have their origin
in the absence and dysfunction of cilia. These include polycystic
kidney disease, the most common genetic cause of kidney failure;
embryonic problems in the body's right-left symmetry that cause
organs to develop on the wrong side of the body; and Bardet-Biedel
syndrome, a rare genetic disorder characterized by obesity, learning
disabilities and eye and kidney problems.
"What was disconcerting
about human cilia defects was that, because the physiology of these
diseases are so complex and broad, the disorders were not initially
tied to cilia dysfunctions," says Zuker. "These people have problems
with their retinas, lungs and kidneys. It's only been in the last
few years that scientists have understood the etiological basis
of some of these human genetic disorders."
Unlike other
studies that sought to identify one or two human genes tied to a
specific human cilia dysfunction, Zuker's team started with the
entire genomes of a wide range of organisms ranging from the unicellular
parasite responsible for malaria to humans. The UCSD biologists
analyzed more than 150,000 genes using an ingenious computer-analysis
strategy, devised by Avidor-Reiss, to search for genes uniquely
involved in cilia formation and function. That enabled them to identify
approximately 200 genes used by radically different forms of life
to build the basic cilia machinery.
Avidor-Reiss
narrowed the field of 200 again to 40 genes important for a type
of cilia found in human, mouse, fruit fly and roundworm cells, then
demonstrated, in a series of experiments in fruit flies, that six
of those genes were integral for the formation of cilia. This was
done by attaching a fluorescent protein to the proteins produced
by the candidate genes that end up at the base of the fly's back
bristles, a form of sensory cilia used by flies to sense their position
in space and steer as they fly (see photograph).
"Using Drosophila,
we were able to demonstrate that all of the genes we have examined
were expressed in ciliated cells by tagging them with green fluorescent
protein," says Avidor-Reiss. "You could just look at the flies and
see them glow."
"What he has
now is a list of very attractive candidates," says Zuker. "What
we have to do now is to assign functions to them, so we can see
how they come together to orchestrate and choreograph the cilia-building
and functioning processes. That's going to be a technically demanding,
but exciting challenge."
Other researchers
who contributed to the study included Edmund Koundakjian and Andrey
Polyanovsky, biologists in Zuker's laboratory; Andreia Maer and
Shankar Subramaniam of UCSD's San Diego Supercomputer Center; and
Thomas Keil of the Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry in Germany.
The study was funded by grants from the National Eye Institute and
the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Media Contacts:
Kim McDonald (858) 534-7572
Comment: Charles
Zuker (858) 534-5528
Tomer Avidor-Reiss
(858) 534-5423
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