AGBL4

AGBL carboxypeptidase 4

Ensembl:
ENSG00000186094
OMIM:
616476
Synonyms:
CCP6, FLJ14442

Cilia effects upon perturbation of AGBL4

Loss-of-function effect:
Decreased cilia number
Overexpression effect:
Longer cilia

Ciliogenesis screen results (1 screen)

  • Wheway et al. 2015 (siRNA) [siRNA]: Ciliogenesis Defect (z=-5.99) PMID:26167766

Phenotypes

Mouse phenotype:
increased monocyte cell number; increased freezing behavior
Mouse ciliopathy phenotype:
increased circulating bilirubin level

Functional category

  • Non-motile cilium / primary cilium
  • Ciliary assembly/disassembly

Function

CCP5 expression is transiently downregulated upon the initiation of ciliogenesis, but recovered after cilia are formed. Overexpression of CCP5 inhibited ciliogenesis, suggesting that a transient downregulation of CCP5 expression is required for ciliation initiation. Interestingly, the inhibitory effect of CCP5 on ciliogenesis does not rely on its enzyme activity. Among other 3 CCP members tested, only CCP6 can similarly suppress ciliogenesis. Using CoIP-MS analysis, we identified a protein that potentially interacts with CCP - CP110, a known negative regulator of ciliogenesis, whose degradation at the distal end of mother centriole permits cilia assembly. We found that both CCP5 and CCP6 can modulate CP110 level. Particularly, CCP5 interacts with CP110 through its N-terminus. Loss of CCP5 or CCP6 led to the disappearance of CP110 at the mother centriole and abnormally increased ciliation in cycling RPE-1 cells. Co-depletion of CCP5 and CCP6 synergized this abnormal ciliation, suggesting their partially overlapped function in suppressing cilia formation in cycling cells. In contrast, co-depletion of the two enzymes did not further increase the length of cilia, although CCP5 and CCP6 differentially regulate polyglutamate side-chain length of ciliary axoneme and both contribute to limiting cilia length, suggesting that they may share a common pathway in cilia length control. Through inducing the overexpression of CCP5 or CCP6 at different stages of ciliogenesis, we further demonstrated that CCP5 or CCP6 inhibited cilia formation before ciliogenesis, while shortened the length of cilia after cilia formation(37226238).