Trisomy 21 alters ciliary localization of Sonic Hedgehog signaling proteins

Wolfgang E. Schleicher,Bailey L. McCurdy,Cayla E. Jewett,Chad G. Pearson

Published 2026 in bioRxiv

ABSTRACT

Trisomy 21 (T21), the cause of Down syndrome, impairs cilia-dependent Sonic Hedgehog (SHH) signaling. We investigated how T21 affects SHH signaling at the primary cilium and found that Smoothened (SMO) protein, the main effector of SHH signaling, is diminished in T21 primary cilia. Specifically, T21 cells exhibit both decreased SMO localization to cilia and reduced SMO activation. Our findings suggest that reduced ciliary SMO in T21 results from defective entry into the cilium rather than impaired transport to centrosomes. Moreover, unlike the ciliogenesis defects observed in T21, the SMO defect is not associated with increased PCNT protein abundance. We also found that other proteins critical for regulating SHH signaling, INPP5E (a positive regulator) and GPR161 (a negative regulator), show disrupted ciliary localization in T21. Notably, prolonged serum depletion to promote primary cilia maturation restores ciliary levels of SMO, INPP5E, and GPR161 in T21 cells to match those of D21 controls. We propose that delayed primary cilia maturation contributes to defective SHH signaling in T21. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Trisomy (T21) impedes primary cilia assembly and function. T21 causes diminished ciliary Smoothened (SMO) levels and activation. T21 alters the localization of other SHH-associated proteins. Increased cilia maturation time equilibrates localization of SHH-associated ciliary proteins.

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