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TAp73 is a central transcriptional regulator of airway multiciliogenesis
ISSN
1549-5477
0890-9369
Date Issued
2016
Author(s)
Nemajerova, Alice
Siller, Saul S.
Herr, Christian
Pena, Tonatiuh
Suazo, Cristina Gallinas
Glaser, Katharina
Wildung, Merit
Steffen, Henrik
Sriraman, Anusha
Oberle, Fabian
Royen, Bettina
Alevra, Mihai
Bals, Robert
Takemaru, Ken-Ichi
DOI
10.1101/gad.279836.116
Abstract
Motile multiciliated cells (MCCs) have critical roles in respiratory health and disease and are essential for cleaning inhaled pollutants and pathogens from airways. Despite their significance for human disease, the transcriptional control that governs multiciliogenesis remains poorly understood. Here we identify TP73, a p53 homolog, as governing the program for airway multiciliogenesis. Mice with TP73 deficiency suffer from chronic respiratory tract infections due to profound defects in ciliogenesis and complete loss of mucociliary clearance. Organotypic airway cultures pinpoint TAp73 as necessary and sufficient for basal body docking, axonemal extension, and motility during the differentiation of MCC progenitors. Mechanistically, cross-species genomic analyses and complete ciliary rescue of knockout MCCs identify TAp73 as the conserved central transcriptional integrator of multiciliogenesis. TAp73 directly activates the key regulators FoxJ1, Rfx2, Rfx3, and miR34bc plus nearly 50 structural and functional ciliary genes, some of which are associated with human ciliopathies. Our results position TAp73 as a novel central regulator of MCC differentiation.