4.4 Article

The intraflagellar transport dynein complex of trypanosomes is made of a heterodimer of dynein heavy chains and of light and intermediate chains of distinct functions

Journal

MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL
Volume 25, Issue 17, Pages 2620-2633

Publisher

AMER SOC CELL BIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1091/mbc.E14-05-0961

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Funding

  1. MNRT (French Ministry of Research)
  2. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale
  3. Pasteur-Weizmann predoctoral fellowships
  4. Institut Pasteur, the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
  5. French National Research Agency [ANR-09-GENO-022-03, ANR-11-BSV8-016-03]

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Cilia and flagella are assembled by intraflagellar transport (IFT) of protein complexes that bring tubulin and other precursors to the incorporation site at their distal tip. Anterograde transport is driven by kinesin, whereas retrograde transport is ensured by a specific dynein. In the protist Trypanosoma brucei, two distinct genes encode fairly different dynein heavy chains (DHCs; -40% identity) termed DHC2.1 and DHC2.2, which form a heterodimer and are both essential for retrograde IFT. The stability of each heavy chain relies on the presence of a dynein light intermediate chain (DLI1; also known as XBX-1/D1bLIC). The presence of both heavy chains and of DLI1 at the base of the flagellum depends on the intermediate dynein chain DIC5 (FAP133/WDR34). In the IFT140(RNAi) mutant, an IFT-A protein essential for retrograde transport, the IFT dynein components are found at high concentration at the flagellar base but fail to penetrate the flagellar compartment. We propose a model by which the IFT dynein particle is assembled in the cytoplasm, reaches the base of the flagellum, and associates with the IFT machinery in a manner dependent on the IFT-A complex.

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