Fibroblast growth factor receptor influences primary cilium length through an interaction with intestinal cell kinase

Author:

Kunova Bosakova MichaelaORCID,Nita Alexandru,Gregor Tomas,Varecha Miroslav,Gudernova Iva,Fafilek Bohumil,Barta Tomas,Basheer Neha,Abraham Sara P.,Balek Lukas,Tomanova Marketa,Fialova Kucerova Jana,Bosak Juraj,Potesil David,Zieba Jennifer,Song Jieun,Konik PeterORCID,Park Sohyun,Duran IvanORCID,Zdrahal Zbynek,Smajs David,Jansen GertORCID,Fu Zheng,Ko Hyuk WanORCID,Hampl Ales,Trantirek Lukas,Krakow DeborahORCID,Krejci Pavel

Abstract

Vertebrate primary cilium is a Hedgehog signaling center but the extent of its involvement in other signaling systems is less well understood. This report delineates a mechanism by which fibroblast growth factor (FGF) controls primary cilia. Employing proteomic approaches to characterize proteins associated with the FGF-receptor, FGFR3, we identified the serine/threonine kinase intestinal cell kinase (ICK) as an FGFR interactor. ICK is involved in ciliogenesis and participates in control of ciliary length. FGF signaling partially abolished ICK’s kinase activity, through FGFR-mediated ICK phosphorylation at conserved residue Tyr15, which interfered with optimal ATP binding. Activation of the FGF signaling pathway affected both primary cilia length and function in a manner consistent with cilia effects caused by inhibition of ICK activity. Moreover, knockdown and knockout of ICK rescued the FGF-mediated effect on cilia. We provide conclusive evidence that FGF signaling controls cilia via interaction with ICK.

Funder

Ministery of Education, Youth and Sports of the Czech Republic

Agency for Healthcare Research of the Czech Republic

Czech Science Foundation

NIH

HHS | NIH | National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences

Ministry of Science, ICT and Future Planning

Masaryk University, Faculty of Medicine

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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