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Cilia in cystic kidney and other diseases

Pazour, Gregory J.
Quarmby, Lynne
Smith, Abigail O
Desai, Paurav B.
Schmidts, Miriam
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Abstract

Epithelial cells lining the ducts and tubules of the kidney nephron and collecting duct have a single non-motile cilium projecting from their surface into the lumen of the tubule. These organelles were long considered vestigial remnants left as a result of evolution from a ciliated ancestor, but we now recognize them as critical sensory antennae. In the kidney, the polycystins and fibrocystin, products of the major human polycystic kidney disease genes, localize to this organelle. The polycystins and fibrocystin, through an unknown mechanism, monitor the diameter of the kidney tubules and regulate the proliferation and differentiation of the cells lining the tubule. When the polycystins, fibrocystin or cilia themselves are defective, the cell perceives this as a pro-proliferative signal, which leads to tubule dilation and cystic disease. In addition to critical roles in preventing cyst formation in the kidney, cilia are also important in cystic and fibrotic diseases of the liver and pancreas, and ciliary defects lead to a variety of developmental abnormalities that cause structural birth defects in most organs.

Source

Pazour GJ, Quarmby L, Smith AO, Desai PB, Schmidts M. Cilia in cystic kidney and other diseases. Cell Signal. 2019 Dec 24;109519. doi: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2019.109519. [Epub ahead of print]. PMID: 31881326; PMCID: PMC6953175. Link to article on publisher's site

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10.1016/j.cellsig.2019.109519
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31881326
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