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Three outer arm dynein heavy chains of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii operate in a coordinated fashion both in vitro and in vivo

Authors :
Hiroko Takazaki
Zhongmei Liu
Mingyue Jin
Ritsu Kamiya
Takuo Yasunaga
Source :
Cytoskeleton. 67:466-476
Publication Year :
2010
Publisher :
Wiley, 2010.

Abstract

Outer arm dynein (OAD) in cilia and flagella contains two to three nonidentical heavy chains (HCs) that possess motor activity. In Chlamydomonas, flagellar OAD contains three HCs, alpha-, beta-, and gamma-HCs, each appearing to have a distinct role. To determine the precise molecular mechanism of their function, cross-sectional electron micrographs of wild-type and single HC-disruption mutants were compared and statistically analyzed. While the alpha-HC mutant displayed an OAD of lower density, which was attributed to a lack of alpha-HC, the OAD of beta- and gamma-HC mutants not only lacked the corresponding HC, but was also significantly affected in its structure, particularly with respect to the localization of alpha-HC. The lack of beta-HC induced mislocalization of alpha-HC, while a disruption of the gamma-HC gene resulted in the synchronized movement of alpha-HC and beta-HC in the manners for stacking. Interestingly, using cryo-electron microscopy, purified OADs were typically observed consisting of two stacked heads and an independent single head, which presumably corresponded to gamma-HC. This conformation is different from previous reports in which the three HCs displayed a stacked form in flagella observed by cryo-electron tomography and a bouquet structure on mica in deep-etch replica images. These results suggest that gamma-HC supports the tight stacking arrangement of inter or intra alpha-/beta-HC to facilitate the proper functioning of OAD.

Details

ISSN :
19493592 and 19493584
Volume :
67
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cytoskeleton
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0c02b527070980f7653491b46acaeffe