Multiciliated cell basal bodies align in stereotypical patterns coordinated by the apical cytoskeleton

Author:

Herawati Elisa1,Taniguchi Daisuke2ORCID,Kanoh Hatsuho13,Tateishi Kazuhiro1ORCID,Ishihara Shuji2ORCID,Tsukita Sachiko1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Biological Science, Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences and Graduate School of Medicine, Osaka University, Osaka 565-0871, Japan

2. Department of Physics, School of Science and Technology, Meiji University, Kanagawa 214-8571, Japan

3. Faculty of Science, Kyoto University, Kyoto 606-8502, Japan

Abstract

Multiciliated cells (MCCs) promote fluid flow through coordinated ciliary beating, which requires properly organized basal bodies (BBs). Airway MCCs have large numbers of BBs, which are uniformly oriented and, as we show here, align linearly. The mechanism for BB alignment is unexplored. To study this mechanism, we developed a long-term and high-resolution live-imaging system and used it to observe green fluorescent protein–centrin2–labeled BBs in cultured mouse tracheal MCCs. During MCC differentiation, the BB array adopted four stereotypical patterns, from a clustering “floret” pattern to the linear “alignment.” This alignment process was correlated with BB orientations, revealed by double immunostaining for BBs and their asymmetrically associated basal feet (BF). The BB alignment was disrupted by disturbing apical microtubules with nocodazole and by a BF-depleting Odf2 mutation. We constructed a theoretical model, which indicated that the apical cytoskeleton, acting like a viscoelastic fluid, provides a self-organizing mechanism in tracheal MCCs to align BBs linearly for mucociliary transport.

Funder

Core Research for Evolutional Science and Technology

Japan Science and Technology Agency

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science, and Technology

Publisher

Rockefeller University Press

Subject

Cell Biology

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