Nature Communications (Nov 2024)

Directional ciliary beats across epithelia require Ccdc57-mediated coupling between axonemal orientation and basal body polarity

  • Xinwen Pan,
  • Chuyu Fang,
  • Chuan Shen,
  • Xixia Li,
  • Lele Xie,
  • Luan Li,
  • Shan Huang,
  • Xiumin Yan,
  • Xueliang Zhu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-54766-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Motile cilia unify their axonemal orientations (AOs), or beat directions, across epithelia to drive liquid flows. This planar polarity results from cytoskeleton-driven swiveling of basal foot (BF), a basal body (BB) appendage coincident with the AO, in response to regulatory cues. How and when the BF-AO relationship is established, however, are unaddressed. Here, we show that the BF-AO coupling occurs during rotational polarizations of BBs and requires Ccdc57. Ccdc57 localizes on BBs as a rotationally-asymmetric punctum, which polarizes away from the BF in BBs having achieved the rotational polarity to probably fix the BF-AO relationship. Consistently, Ccdc57-deficient ependymal multicilia lack the BF-AO coupling and display directional beats at only single cell level. Ccdc57 −/− tracheal multicilia also fail to fully align their BFs. Furthermore, Ccdc57 −/− mice manifest severe hydrocephalus, due to impaired cerebrospinal fluid flow, and high mortality. These findings unravel mechanisms governing the planar polarity of epithelial motile cilia.