TBC1D32 (BROMI) is a ciliary protein that regulates intraflagellar transport (IFT) turnaround at the ciliary tip and is required for proper ciliogenesis and Hedgehog signaling across multiple tissues (PMID:35609210, PMID:34624068). It functions within a complex containing the kinase CCRK/CDK20, FAM149B1/JBTS36, and the conserved ciliary protein CFAP20, where BROMI mutants defective in binding either CCRK or CFAP20 fail to rescue the abnormally long cilia and tip accumulation of IFT machinery seen in BROMI-knockout cells, placing the complex under the control of ICK/CILK1 (PMID:35609210). The CCRK–BROMI interaction is specifically required for retrograde ciliary trafficking and IFT turnaround, since a CCRK mutant unable to bind BROMI cannot reverse the overaccumulation of IFT proteins at bulged ciliary tips or the abnormal enrichment of GPR161 and Smoothened on the ciliary membrane (PMID:34624068). In vivo, TBC1D32 acts redundantly with Dzip1l in ciliogenesis, cilia morphogenesis, and neural tube patterning (PMID:29487109), and is required for retinal pigment epithelium ciliogenesis, epithelial integrity, retinoid cycling, and photoreceptor connecting cilium function (PMID:37768732). Beyond these roles, the biochemical activity of the TBC domain itself has not been characterized in the available corpus.