4.8 Article

Bicc1 and Dicer regulate left-right patterning through post-transcriptional control of the Nodal inhibitor Dand5

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 12, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25464-z

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Landesgraduiertenforderung Baden-Wurttemberg
  2. DFG [BL285/9-2]
  3. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development of the National Institutes of Health [R01HD091921, T32GM007388]
  4. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology (MEXT) of Japan [17H01435]
  5. Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology (CREST) of the Japan Science and Technology Agency [JPMJCR13W5]
  6. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science (JSPS) [18K14725]
  7. BDR-Otsuka Pharmaceutical Collaboration Center
  8. Kato Memorial Bioscience Foundation [2018M-018]
  9. National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [R35GM12258003]
  10. United Negro College Fund/Merck Graduate Science Research Dissertation Fellowship
  11. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18K14725, 17H01435] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The authors demonstrate that post-transcriptional regulation of the cilia-driven leftward flow gene dand5 is crucial for symmetry breakage in frogs, fish, and mice, with Pkd2 playing a regulatory role. This process is mediated by a 139 nt Bicc1 responsive element in the dand5 3 ' UTR.
The authors show that post-transcriptional regulation of the cilia-driven leftward flow target dand5 is central to symmetry breakage in frog, fish and mouse and is mediated by a 139 nt Bicc1 responsive element in the dand5 3 ' UTR, and they present evidence that Pkd2 regulates this Bicc1/dand5 module. Rotating cilia at the vertebrate left-right organizer (LRO) generate an asymmetric leftward flow, which is sensed by cells at the left LRO margin. Ciliary activity of the calcium channel Pkd2 is crucial for flow sensing. How this flow signal is further processed and relayed to the laterality-determining Nodal cascade in the left lateral plate mesoderm (LPM) is largely unknown. We previously showed that flow down-regulates mRNA expression of the Nodal inhibitor Dand5 in left sensory cells. De-repression of the co-expressed Nodal, complexed with the TGFss growth factor Gdf3, drives LPM Nodal cascade induction. Here, we show that post-transcriptional repression of dand5 is a central process in symmetry breaking of Xenopus, zebrafish and mouse. The RNA binding protein Bicc1 was identified as a post-transcriptional regulator of dand5 and gdf3 via their 3 '-UTRs. Two distinct Bicc1 functions on dand5 mRNA were observed at pre- and post-flow stages, affecting mRNA stability or flow induced translational inhibition, respectively. To repress dand5, Bicc1 co-operates with Dicer1, placing both proteins in the process of flow sensing. Intriguingly, Bicc1 mediated translational repression of a dand5 3 '-UTR mRNA reporter was responsive to pkd2, suggesting that a flow induced Pkd2 signal triggers Bicc1 mediated dand5 inhibition during symmetry breakage.

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