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Regulation of the extracellular matrix by ciliary machinery

Regulation of the extracellular matrix by ciliary machinery
Regulation of the extracellular matrix by ciliary machinery
The primary cilium is an organelle involved in cellular signalling. Mutations affecting proteins involved in cilia assembly or function result in diseases known as ciliopathies, which cause a wide variety of phenotypes across multiple tissues. These mutations disrupt various cellular processes, including regulation of the extracellular matrix. The matrix is important for maintaining tissue homeostasis through influencing cell behaviour and providing structural support; therefore, the matrix changes observed in ciliopathies have been implicated in the pathogenesis of these diseases. Whilst many studies have associated the cilium with processes that regulate the matrix, exactly how these matrix changes arise is not well characterised. This review aims to bring together the direct and indirect evidence for ciliary regulation of matrix, in order to summarise the possible mechanisms by which the ciliary machinery could regulate the composition, secretion, remodelling and organisation of the matrix.
2073-4409
Collins, I.
b39207ba-f955-45ff-bc5c-12b638a56332
Wann, A.K.T
f1b0ea2f-dc8a-4588-a9d8-ae462ed0a993
Collins, I.
b39207ba-f955-45ff-bc5c-12b638a56332
Wann, A.K.T
f1b0ea2f-dc8a-4588-a9d8-ae462ed0a993

Collins, I. and Wann, A.K.T (2020) Regulation of the extracellular matrix by ciliary machinery. Cells, 9 (2), [278]. (doi:10.3390/cells9020278).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The primary cilium is an organelle involved in cellular signalling. Mutations affecting proteins involved in cilia assembly or function result in diseases known as ciliopathies, which cause a wide variety of phenotypes across multiple tissues. These mutations disrupt various cellular processes, including regulation of the extracellular matrix. The matrix is important for maintaining tissue homeostasis through influencing cell behaviour and providing structural support; therefore, the matrix changes observed in ciliopathies have been implicated in the pathogenesis of these diseases. Whilst many studies have associated the cilium with processes that regulate the matrix, exactly how these matrix changes arise is not well characterised. This review aims to bring together the direct and indirect evidence for ciliary regulation of matrix, in order to summarise the possible mechanisms by which the ciliary machinery could regulate the composition, secretion, remodelling and organisation of the matrix.

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Accepted/In Press date: 19 January 2020
Published date: 23 January 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 488344
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/488344
ISSN: 2073-4409
PURE UUID: 602da5d4-a047-4266-8a82-c775433358cb
ORCID for A.K.T Wann: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8224-8661

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Date deposited: 20 Mar 2024 18:02
Last modified: 21 Mar 2024 03:12

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Contributors

Author: I. Collins
Author: A.K.T Wann ORCID iD

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