DOI: 10.1083/jcb.202409057 ISSN: 0021-9525

Importin-9 and a TPR domain protein MpH drive periodic patterning of ciliary arrays in Tetrahymena

Anushi Suwaneththiya Deraniyagala, Wolfgang Maier, Mireya Parra, Elise Nanista, Deborah Oluwabukola Sowunmi, Michael Hassan, Nathan Chasen, Sunita Sharma, Karl F. Lechtreck, Eric S. Cole, Natalia Bernardes, Yuh Min Chook, Jacek Gaertig

We explored how the number of structures is determined in an intracellular organelle series. In Tetrahymena, the oral apparatus contains three diagonal ciliary rows: M1, M2, and M3. During development, the M rows emerge by sequential segmentation of a group of basal bodies, starting with the longest and most anterior M1 and ending with the shortest and most posterior M3. The mpD-1 and mpH-1 alleles increase and decrease the number of M rows, respectively. We identify MpH as a TPR protein and MpD as an importin-9. Both proteins localize to the M rows and form concentration gradients. MpH is a row elongation factor whose loss shortens all M rows and often prevents the formation of M3. MpD limits row initiation after the emergence of M2. MpD could be a part of a negative feedback loop that limits row initiation when M1 assembly is properly advanced. We conclude that the forming oral apparatus has properties of a semi-autonomous intracellular developmental field.

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