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Bicc1 and dicer regulate left-right patterning through post-transcriptional control of the Nodal-inhibitor dand5.

Authors: 
Maerker M, Getwan M, Dowdle ME, Pelliccia JL, McSheene JC, Yartseva V, Minegishi K, Vick P, Giraldez AJ, Hamada H, Burdine RD, Sheets MD, Schweickert A, Blum M.
Citation: 
bioRxiv. 2020;[preprint] doi:10.1101/2020.01.29.924456
Abstract: 
Rotating cilia at the vertebrate left-right organizer (LRO) generate an asymmetric leftward flow, which is sensed by cells at the left LRO margin. How the flow signal is processed and relayed to the laterality-determining Nodal cascade in the left lateral plate mesoderm (LPM) is largely unknown. We previously showed that flow down-regulates mRNA expression of the Nodal inhibitor Dand5 in left sensory cells. De-repression of the co-expressed Nodal drives LPM Nodal cascade induction. Here, we identify the mechanism of dand5 downregulation, finding that its posttranscriptional repression is a central process in symmetry breaking. Specifically, the RNA binding protein Bicc1 interacts with a proximal element in the 3’-UTR of dand5 to repress translation in a dicer1-dependent manner. The bicc1/dicer1 module acts downstream of flow, as LRO ciliation was not affected upon its loss. Loss of bicc1 or dicer1 was rescued by parallel knockdown of dand5, placing both genes in the process of flow sensing.
Epub: 
Not Epub
Organism or Cell Type: 
zebrafish, Xenopus laevis
Delivery Method: 
microinjection