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Publication : SPATA7 maintains a novel photoreceptor-specific zone in the distal connecting cilium.

First Author  Dharmat R Year  2018
Journal  J Cell Biol Volume  217
Issue  8 Pages  2851-2865
PubMed ID  29899041 Mgi Jnum  J:264617
Mgi Id  MGI:6194004 Doi  10.1083/jcb.201712117
Citation  Dharmat R, et al. (2018) SPATA7 maintains a novel photoreceptor-specific zone in the distal connecting cilium. J Cell Biol 217(8):2851-2865
abstractText  Photoreceptor-specific ciliopathies often affect a structure that is considered functionally homologous to the ciliary transition zone (TZ) called the connecting cilium (CC). However, it is unclear how mutations in certain ciliary genes disrupt the photoreceptor CC without impacting the primary cilia systemically. By applying stochastic optical reconstruction microscopy technology in different genetic models, we show that the CC can be partitioned into two regions: the proximal CC (PCC), which is homologous to the TZ of primary cilia, and the distal CC (DCC), a photoreceptor-specific extension of the ciliary TZ. This specialized distal zone of the CC in photoreceptors is maintained by SPATA7, which interacts with other photoreceptor-specific ciliary proteins such as RPGR and RPGRIP1. The absence of Spata7 results in the mislocalization of DCC proteins without affecting the PCC protein complexes. This collapse results in destabilization of the axonemal microtubules, which consequently results in photoreceptor degeneration. These data provide a novel mechanism to explain how genetic disruption of ubiquitously present ciliary proteins exerts tissue-specific ciliopathy phenotypes.
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