RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Mutation of CFAP57 causes primary ciliary dyskinesia by disrupting the asymmetric targeting of a subset of ciliary inner dynein arms JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 773028 DO 10.1101/773028 A1 Ximena M. Bustamante-Marin A1 Amjad Horani A1 Mihaela Stoyanova A1 Wu-Lin Charng A1 Mathieu Bottier A1 Patrick R. Sears A1 Leigh Anne Daniels A1 Hailey Bowen A1 Donald F. Conrad A1 Michael R. Knowles A1 Lawrence E. Ostrowski A1 Maimoona A. Zariwala A1 Susan K. Dutcher YR 2019 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/09/24/773028.abstract AB Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is characterized by chronic airway disease, male infertility, and randomization of the left/right body axis, and is caused by defects of motile cilia and sperm flagella. We screened a cohort of affected individuals that lack an obvious TEM structural phenotype for pathogenic variants using whole exome capture and next generation sequencing. The population sampling probability (PSAP) algorithm identified one subject with a homozygous nonsense variant [(c.1762C>T) p.(Arg588*) exon 11] in the uncharacterized CFAP57 gene. In normal human nasal epithelial cells, CFAP57 localizes throughout the ciliary axoneme. Analysis of cells from the PCD patient shows a loss of CFAP57, reduced beat frequency, and an alteration in the ciliary waveform. Knockdown of CFAP57 in human tracheobronchial epithelial cells (hTECs) recapitulates these findings. Phylogenetic analysis showed that CFAP57 is conserved in organisms that assemble motile cilia, and CFAP57 is allelic with the BOP2 gene identified previously in Chlamydomonas. Two independent, insertional fap57 Chlamydomonas mutant strains show reduced swimming velocity and altered waveforms. Tandem mass spectroscopy showed that CFAP57 is missing, and the ā€œgā€ inner dyneins (DHC7 and DHC3) and the ā€œdā€ inner dynein (DHC2) are reduced. Our data demonstrate that the FAP57 protein is required for the asymmetric assembly of inner dyneins on only a subset of the microtubule doublets, and this asymmetry is essential for the generation of an effective axonemal waveform. Together, our data identifies mutations in CFAP57 as a cause of PCD with a specific defect in the inner dynein arm assembly process.Significance Motile cilia are found throughout eukaryotic organisms and performs essential functions. Primary ciliary dyskinesia (PCD) is a rare disease that affects the function of motile cilia. By applying a novel population sampling probability algorithm (PSAP) that uses large population sequencing databases and pathogenicity prediction algorithms, we identified a variant in an uncharacterized gene, CFAP57. This is the first reported example of PCD caused by a mutation that affects only a subset of the inner dynein arms, which are needed to generate the waveform. CFAP57 identifies an address for specific dynein arms. These findings demonstrate the effectiveness of the PSAP algorithm, expand our understanding of the positioning of dynein arms, and identify mutations in CFAP57 as a cause of PCD.