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1.
When a Euglena, in a medium containing ATP, is microinjected with 7 × 10−14 l of 0.02 M EDTA, which binds Ca2+ and Mg2+, flagellar motility stops. Flagellar arrest in Chlamydomonas occurs with the injection of 2 × 10−14 l of 0.02 M EDTA. The injection of similar amounts (7 × 10−14 l in Euglena and 3 × 10−14 l in Chlamydomonas) of 0.02 M EGTA, which preferentially binds Ca2+, did not significantly alter flagellar motility. This suggests that a decrease in the internal Ca2+ concentration in Euglena or Chlamydomonas did not stimulate flagellar beating. Further, flagellar motility decreased when internal Mg2+ was chelated. The microinjection of Zn2+ into these cells caused a decrease in flagellar frequency analogous to the decrease in frequency caused by the injection of Ca2+ and EDTA. The microinjection of 7 × 10−14 l of 0.2 M Mn2+ caused an approx. 1.5-fold increase in Euglena flagellar motility. Chlamydomonas flagella, which cease to beat upon impalement in an Mg2+-free medium, resume a flagellar frequency of 18 Hz when injected with 3 × 10−14 l of 0.2 M Mn2+. In the experiments reported here, Mn2+ acts as an analog of Mg2+.  相似文献   

2.
Symmetry/asymmetry conversion of eukaryotic flagellar waveform is caused by the changes in intracellular Ca2+. Animal sperm flagella show symmetric or asymmetric waveform at lower or higher concentration of intracellular Ca2+, respectively. In Chlamydomonas, high Ca2+ induces conversion of flagellar waveform from asymmetric to symmetry, resulting in the backward movement. This mirror image relationship between animal sperm and Chlamydomonas could be explained by the distinct calcium sensors used to regulate the outer arm dyneins (Inaba 2015). Here we analyze the flagellar Ca2+-response of the prasinophyte Pterosperma cristatum, which shows backward movement by undulating four flagella, the appearance similar to animal sperm. The moving path of Pterosperma shows relatively straight in artificial seawater (ASW) or ASW in the presence of a Ca2+ ionophore A23187, whereas it becomes circular in a low Ca2+ solution. Analysis of flagellar waveform reveals symmetric or asymmetric waveform propagation in ASW or a low Ca2+ solution, respectively. These patterns of flagellar responses are completely opposite to those in sperm flagella of the sea urchin Anthocidaris crassispina, supporting the idea previously proposed that the difference in flagellar response to Ca2+ attributes to the evolutional innovation of calcium sensors of outer arm dynein in opisthokont or bikont lineage.  相似文献   

3.
A backward swimming mutant (RL-10) was isolated from Chlamydomonas reinhardii. In contrast to the wild-type flagellum which usually displays a ciliary type beating pattern, the flagella in the RL-10 cells always propagated such undulating waves as found in sperm flagella. This abnormal beating pattern was maintained after the cell was demembranated by a non-ionic detergent (Nonidet P40) and reactivated with ATP. Reactivated axonemes (demembranated flagella) of the wild-type cells changed the beating pattern from the ciliary type to the flagellar type when the Ca2+ concentration was increased from 10−7 to 10−6 M. However, the RL-10 axonemes did not show such a Ca-dependent change in the beating pattern. Hence the RL-10 flagella might carry defects in the controlling mechanisms of flagellar beating pattern, at sites other than the membrane.  相似文献   

4.
Dibucaine, a local anesthetic, is known to induce flagellar excision in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Herein, we investigate whether other local anesthetics have similar effects. Tetracaine, bupivacaine, procaine, and lidocaine also caused flagellar excision, although their potencies were lower than that of dibucaine. Bupivacaine, procaine, and lidocaine induced a morphological change in flagella from a rod‐like shape to a disk‐like shape before flagellar excision. Except for lidocaine, these local anesthetics caused cell‐wall shedding in addition to flagellar excision. The anesthetics in order of their median effective concentration (1‐h EC50) for flagellar excision are as follows: dibucaine (1.37 × 10?5 M) < tetracaine (3.16 × 10?5 M) < bupivacaine (4.25 × 10?4 M) < procaine (2.02 × 10?3 M) < lidocaine (3.61 × 10?3 M). In all cases, Ca2+ depletion from the solution inhibited flagellar excision. However, Ca2+‐channel blockers, IP3 receptor antagonists, and inhibitors of phospholipase C did not prevent excision. We suggest that the local anesthetics induce flagellar excision by increasing the fluidity of the flagellar/cell membrane, thereby allowing extracellular Ca2+ to flow into the cell and cause flagellar excision.  相似文献   

5.
When a Euglena, in a medium containing ATP, is microinjected with 7 × 10?14 l of 0.02 M EDTA, which binds Ca2+ and Mg2+, flagellar motility stops. Flagellar arrest in Chlamydomonas occurs with the injection of 2 × 10?14 l of 0.02 M EDTA. The injection of similar amounts (7 × 10?14 l in Euglena and 3 × 10?14 l in Chlamydomonas) of 0.02 M EGTA, which preferentially binds Ca2+, did not significantly alter flagellar motility. This suggests that a decrease in the internal Ca2+ concentration in Euglena or Chlamydomonas did not stimulate flagellar beating. Further, flagellar motility decreased when internal Mg2+ was chelated. The microinjection of Zn2+ into these cells caused a decrease in flagellar frequency analogous to the decrease in frequency caused by the injection of Ca2+ and EDTA. The microinjection of 7 × 10?14 l of 0.2 M Mn2+ caused an approx. 1.5-fold increase in Euglena flagellar motility. Chlamydomonas flagella, which cease to beat upon impalement in an Mg2+-free medium, resume a flagellar frequency of 18 Hz when injected with 3 × 10?14 l of 0.2 M Mn2+. In the experiments reported here, Mn2+ acts as an analog of Mg2+.  相似文献   

6.
Peter Hegemann 《Planta》1997,203(3):265-274
Flagellate green algae such as Chlamydomonas and related genera are guided by their eyes to places where light conditions are optimal for photosynthetic growth. These eyes constitute the simplest and most common visual system found in nature. The eyes contain optics, photoreceptors and the elementary components of a signal-transduction chain. Rhodopsin serves as the photoreceptor, as it does in animal vision. Upon light stimulation, its all-trans-retinal chromophore isomerizes into 13-cis and activates a photoreceptor channel which leads to a rapid Ca2+ influx into the eyespot region. At low light levels, the depolarization activates small flagellar currents which induce in both flagella small but slightly different beating changes resulting in distinct directional changes. In continuous light, Ca2+ fluxes serve as the molecular basis for phototaxis. In response to flashes of higher energy the larger photoreceptor currents trigger a massive Ca2+ influx into the flagella which causes the well-known phobic response. The identification of proteins contributing to this signalling system has just begun with the isolation and cloning of the opsins from Chlamydomonas and Volvox. These plant opsins are highly charged, are not typical seven-helix receptors, and are believed to form a protein complex with the photoreceptor channel. In Spermatozopsis, a G-protein has been found which interacts either directly with the rhodopsin or with the rhodopsin-ion channel complex. By using insertional mutagenesis, genes coding for proteins that are involved in signalling have been tagged. One of them is connected to the flagellar channel and crucial for the flagellar action potential. Elucidation of photoreception in flagellated algae will provide deeper insight into the development of visual systems, starting from single-celled organisms and moving up through higher animals. Received: 10 March 1997 / Accepted: 18 April 1997  相似文献   

7.
Flagellar activity in the biflagellate chlorophyte Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is selectively inhibited by Ni2+ or by treatment with Ca2+-chelating agents. Inhibitions of swimming speed, geotaxis, phototaxis, and pattern swimming result from qualitative and quantitative losses in the activity of individual flagella and in the coordination of activity beween the 2 flagella of each cell. Addition of Ca2+ (a) prevents inhibition and (b) restores normal flagellar activity in inhibited cells. Mg2+ is partially effective in reversal of inhibition. Other ions do not cause similar inhibition or reversal of nickel inhibition. The characteristics of inhibition and reversal suggest that the prmary target for nickel is a component of the flagellar apparatus, and that this component uses Ca2+ to perform its normal function in the regulation of flagellar activity. A 2nd target for nickel is a Carequiring process specific to phototaxis (and not involved in the photophobic response).  相似文献   

8.
The ultrastructure of the flagellar apparatus in pre-inversion and inversion stages of Platydorina resembles that of Chlamydomonas in having 180° rotational symmetry and clockwise absolute orientation. Basal bodies are in a “V” configuration and connected by one distal and two proximal fibers. Alternating two- and four-membered microtubular rootlets are cruciately arranged. During maturation, the basal bodies rotate and separate, and 180° rotational symmetry is lost. Simultaneously, each proximal fiber detaches from one of the functional basal bodies, and the distal fiber detaches from both. The mature apparatus has widely separated and nearly parallel basal bodies. Flagellar orientation in Platydorina is completed just after inversion and a flattening of the colony called intercalation, resulting in the pairs of flagella of neighboring cells extending from the colony in opposite directions in an alternating fashion. Flagellar orientation and separated basal bodies minimize the interference between the flagella of neighboring cells. Basal bodies and rootlets of the two intercalated halves of a colony rotate, resulting in the effective strokes of the flagella of every cell being towards the colonial posterior. The flagella of each cell beat with an effective stroke in the direction of the two inner rootlets. The flagella have an asymmetrical ciliary type beat. The rotated, separated, and parallel basal bodies, together with the nearly parallel rootlets probably are adaptations for movement of this colonial volvocalean alga. The flagellar apparatus in immature stages of Platydorina lends support to the suggestion that the alga has evolved from a Chlamydomonas-like ancestor.  相似文献   

9.
Summary— Dinoflagellates possess two flagella. One of them, the longitudinal flagellum, retracts from time to time in some species, such as Ceratium and Peridinium. Additional structures which run along the axoneme seem to be responsible for this particular behaviour. The retraction which is rapid (less than 60 ms) may be subdivided into several steps: i) the undulating movement stops; ii) the flagellum appears then as a jagged line during 20 ms; iii) finally a rapid retraction (20 ms) takes place, the flagellum being folded 20 times inside the cylindrical flagellar pocket. The measurements on video-records suggest that the R-fibre shortens to 30% of its original length. The contraction and relaxation mechanism of nanofilaments is proposed to be through coiling and uncoiling dependent on Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

10.
Cyclic AMP (cAMP) has been shown to be a primary signal of the agglutination-induced mating events of flagellar tip activation, cell wall loss, and mating structure activation in the unicellular alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Pasquale and Goodenough, Cell Biol. 105 (1987), 2279–2293). The flagellar membrane adenylate cyclase of Chlamydomonas is here shown to be inhibited in vitro by EGTA, La3+, and trifluoperazine, and to be stimulated in the presence of calcium by incubation with exogenous calmodulin. Also, the motility of detergent-extracted models of Chlamydomonas is shown to be enhanced by cAMP. These observations suggest the hypothesis that the twitching motility characteristic of agglutinating Chlamydomonas gametes may be signaled by cAMP produced locally within the flagella by a calmodulin-sensitive adenylate cyclase.  相似文献   

11.
ABSTRACT. Tritrichomonas foetus is a flagellated protozoon found in urogenital tract of cattle. Its free movement in liquid medium is powered by the coordinated movement of three flagella projecting towards the anterior region of the cell, and one recurrent flagellum that forms a junction with the cell body and ends as a free projection in the posterior region of the cell. We have used video microscopy and digital image processing to analyze the relationships between the movements of these flagella. The anterior flagella beat in a ciliary type pattern displaying effective and recovery strokes, while the recurrent flagellum beats in a typical flagellar wave form. One of the three anterior flagella has a distinctive pattern of beating. It beats straight in its forward direction as opposed to the ample beats performed by the others. Frequency measurements obtained from cells swimming in a viscous medium shows that the beating frequency of the recurrent flagelium is approximate twice the frequency for the three anterior flagella. We also observed that the costa and the axostyle do not show any active motion. On the contrary, they form a cytoskeletal base for the anchoring and orientation of the flagella.  相似文献   

12.
Background information. Spermatozoa show several changes in flagellar waveform, such as upon fertilization. Ca2+ has been shown to play critical roles in modulating the waveforms of sperm flagella. However, a Ca2+‐binding protein in sperm flagella that regulates axonemal dyneins has not been fully characterized. Results. We identified a novel neuronal calcium sensor family protein, named calaxin (Ca2+‐binding axonemal protein), in sperm flagella of the ascidian Ciona intestinalis. Calaxin has three EF‐hand Ca2+‐binding motifs, and its orthologues are present in metazoan species, but not in yeast, green algae or plant. Immunolocalization revealed that calaxin is localized near the outer arm of the sperm flagellar axonemes. Moreover, it is distributed in adult tissues bearing epithelial cilia. An in vitro binding experiment indicated that calaxin binds to outer arm dynein. A cross‐linking experiment showed that calaxin binds to β‐tubulin in situ. Overlay experiments further indicated that calaxin binds the β‐dynein heavy chain of outer arm dynein in the presence of Ca2+. Conclusions. These results suggest that calaxin is a potential Ca2+‐dependent modulator of outer arm dynein in metazoan cilia and flagella.  相似文献   

13.
Summary In flagellate green algae two types of fibrous flagellar roots can be distinguished: system I fibres, cross-striated bundles of 2nm filaments (striation periodicity about 30 nm), which are associated with flagellar root microtubules, and system II fibres, contractile bundles of 4–8 nm filaments which are often cross-striated (striation periodicity variable but greater than 80 nm). The major protein of system II fibres is centrin, a Ca2+-modulated phosphoprotein, which is a member of the EF-hand protein family. The major protein of system I fibres (of severalChlamydomonas-type green algae) is a 34 kDa phosphoprotein, named assemblin. Because of the solubility characteristics of system I fibres and the properties of their major protein (paracrystal-formation in vitro, several isoelectric variants, heptad motifs in parts of the amino acid sequence), assemblin is presumably related to the k-m-e-f class of -helical fibrous proteins.Abbreviations NBBC nucleus-basal body connector - SMAC striated microtubule-associated component - k-m-e-f class keratin-myosin-elastin-fibrinogen class - EF-hand protein family Ca2+-binding proteins containing one to several Ca2+-binding motifs consisting of a peculiar helix-loop-helix configuration - PVDF polyvinyhdene difluoride  相似文献   

14.
Brown algal male gametes show chemotaxis to the sex pheromone that is released from female gametes. The chemotactic behavior of the male gametes is controlled by the changes in the beating of two flagella known as the anterior and posterior flagellum. Our previous study using Mutimo cylindricus showed that the sex pheromone induced an increment in both the deflection angle of the anterior flagellum and sustained unilateral bend of the posterior flagellum, but the mechanisms regulating these two flagellar waveforms were not fully revealed. In this study, we analyzed the changes in swimming path and flagellar waveforms with a high-speed recording system under different calcium conditions. The extracellular Ca2+ concentration at 10−3 M caused an increment in the deflection angle of the anterior flagellum only when ionomycin was absent. No sustained unilateral bend of the posterior flagellum was induced either in the absence or presence of ionomycin in extracellular Ca2+ concentrations below 10−2 M. Real-time Ca2+ imaging revealed that there is a spot near the basal part of anterior flagellum showing higher Ca2+ than in the other parts of the cell. The intensity of the spot slightly decreased when male gametes were treated with the sex pheromone. These results suggest that Ca2+-dependent changes in the anterior and posterior flagellum are regulated by distinct mechanisms and that the increase in the anterior flagellar deflection angle and sustained unilateral bend of the posterior flagellum may not be primarily induced by the Ca2+ concentration.  相似文献   

15.
The bacterial flagellum consists of a long extracellular filament that is rotated by a motor embedded in the cell envelope. While flagellar assembly has been extensively studied,1 the disassembly process remains less well understood. In addition to the programmed flagellar ejection that occurs during the life cycle of Caulobacter crescentus, we and others have recently shown that many bacterial species lose their flagella under starvation conditions, leaving relic structures in the outer membrane.2–7 However, it remains unknown whether the programmed flagellar ejection of C. crescentus leaves similar relics or not. Here, we imaged the various stages of the C. crescentus life cycle using electron cryo-tomography (cryo-ET) and found that flagellar relic subcomplexes, akin to those produced in the starvation-induced process, remain as a result of flagellar ejection during cell development. This similarity suggests that the programmed flagellar ejection of C. crescentus might share a common evolutionary path with the more general, and likely more ancient,3 starvation-related flagellar loss.  相似文献   

16.
The mating activity of mating-type plus gametes of Chlamydomonas eugametos depends on light. Cells lost their ability to agglutinate with mating-type minus gametes after a dark period of 30 min. They regained their agglutinability after 10 min exposure to light. Other mating reactions, such as tipping and flagellar tip activation, were not dependent upon light. Since cycloheximide and tunicamycin did not affect the light-induced activation of flagellar agglutinability, no protein synthesis or glycosylation is involved in this process. Equal amounts of biologically active agglutination factor could be extracted from cells placed either in light or in darkness. A minor portion of the active material was found to be located on the flagellar surface of illuminated cells. No active material was found on the flagellar surface of dark-exposed cells, whereas their cell bodies contained the same amount of active material as the cell bodies of illuminated cells. Since a light-induced flow of agglutination factors from the cell body to the flagella could not be detected and dark-exposed cells could be slightly activated by amputation or fixation by glutaraldehyde, we propose that light affects flagellar agglutinability by an in-situ modification of the agglutination factor on the flagella. When mt + and mt - strains were crossed and the progeny examined for light-sensitivity, it was apparent that this phenomenon is not mating type-linked.Abbreviations and symbols FTA flagellar tip activation - mt +/- mating type plus or minus - WGA wheat-germ agglutinin  相似文献   

17.
Initial Cu++ sorption by Cyclotella meneghiniana Kütz. (Cu++-sensitive) and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii Dangeard (Cu++-resistant) was rapid in the first 5 min of Cu++ incubation with little sorption after 2 h. On a cell to cell basis, Cyclotella sorbed ca. five times more Cu++ from the medium than Chlamydomonas. In MBL medium with EDTA Cyclotella and Chlamydomonas cells sorbed 21.0 and 4.41 nM Cu++/106 cells respectively in 6 h with 0.3 mg Cu++/l in the medium. Proportionally similar quantities of Cu++ were sorbed when the cells were Cu++ incubated in MBL + citrate or filtered lake water. Cleaned cell walls of Cyclotella sorbed little Cu++ (1.7 nM/106 cells) as compared to living cells (17.5 nM Cu++/106 cells) in 3 h. Therefore, in living Cyclotella most of the Cu++ taken up must be absorbed by the protoplasm or perhaps by the organic layer surrounding the silica wall. Cleaned cell walls of Chlamydomonas sorbed 3.5 nM Cu++/106 cells and living Chlamydomonas cells sorbed 2.6 nM Cu++/106 cells. This indicates that most of the Cu++ sorbed by Chlamydomonas cells remained bound to the cell wall and probably did not readily enter into the protoplasm: When placed in Cu++ free medium after Cu++ incubation, Cyclotella and Chlamydomonas cells released 46 and 59% respectively of the Cu++ sorbed.  相似文献   

18.
R. A. Bloodgood 《Protoplasma》1991,164(1-3):12-22
Summary Ciliary and flagellar membranes are dynamic. Ciliary and flagellar membranes have diverged widely during evolution and perform many specialized functions. Transmembrane signaling is an important component of the function of ciliary and flagellar surfaces in general. In this review, I discuss some of the functions performed by ciliary and flagellar surfaces and I present three different ciliary and flagellar signaling systems associated with rather different dynamic events performed by ciliary and flagellar surfaces. Two of these are associated withChlamydomonas flagella and one is associated with vertebrate olfactory cilia. Calcium regulation of protein phosphorylation appears to be important in regulating glycoprotein movements in theChlamydomonas flagellar membrane. Changes in levels of cAMP and cAMP-dependent protein phosphorylation are clearly central to the signaling associated with mating events in gametic flagella ofChlamydomonas, although calcium clearly has an important, if poorly understood, role to play. There is no known role for G proteins in flagellar membrane events inChlamydomonas. In contrast, mammalian olfactory cilia possess an odorant activated, G protein regulated adenylate cyclase and conductance channels that are directly gated by cyclic nucleotides. A second class of odorants that do not affect adenylate cyclase activity appear to act through G protein activated phospholipase C and changes in IP3 second messenger levels. These examples demonstrate the diversity in the signaling pathways associated with ciliary and flagellar membranes.Abbreviations CaPK-2 calcium-dependent protein kinase - db-cAMP dibutyryl cAMP - Fab fragment antigen binding - IgE immunoglobulin E - IP3 myo-inositol trisphosphate - IP4 myo-inositol tetrakisphosphate - OBP odorant binding protein - PIP2 phosphoinositol bisphosphate - TFP trifluoperazine - WGA wheat germ agglutinin  相似文献   

19.
Flagellar assembly requires coordination between the assembly of axonemal proteins and the assembly of the flagellar membrane and membrane proteins. Fully grown steady-state Chlamydomonas flagella release flagellar vesicles from their tips and failure to resupply membrane should affect flagellar length. To study vesicle release, plasma and flagellar membrane surface proteins were vectorially pulse-labeled and flagella and vesicles were analyzed for biotinylated proteins. Based on the quantity of biotinylated proteins in purified vesicles, steady-state flagella appeared to shed a minimum of 16% of their surface membrane per hour, equivalent to a complete flagellar membrane being released every 6 hrs or less. Brefeldin-A destroyed Chlamydomonas Golgi, inhibited the secretory pathway, inhibited flagellar regeneration, and induced full-length flagella to disassemble within 6 hrs, consistent with flagellar disassembly being induced by a failure to resupply membrane. In contrast to membrane lipids, a pool of biotinylatable membrane proteins was identified that was sufficient to resupply flagella as they released vesicles for 6 hrs in the absence of protein synthesis and to support one and nearly two regenerations of flagella following amputation. These studies reveal the importance of the secretory pathway to assemble and maintain full-length flagella.  相似文献   

20.
ABSTRACT. Alcian blue acts as a secretagogue and chemorepellent in a variety of unicellular eukaryotes. We report that alcian blue stimulates flagellar excision and induction of RNA encoding flagellar proteins in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii . Flagellar excision by alcian blue is dependent on extracellular Ca2+ and is blocked by La3+, ruthenium red, and neomycin, and so is similar to flagellar excision by acid shock. However, the adf-l mutant excises its flagella following alcian blue treatment, but not following acid shock, thus genetically distinguishing alcian-blue-induced excision from acid-shock-induced excision. Wild-type, but not adf-1, cells regrow their flagella in the continued presence of alcian blue. Wild-type cells that regrow flagella in the presence of alcian blue fail to excise their flagella in response to either increased concentrations of alcian blue or to acid shock. Alcian blue treatment of cells also induces RNA encoding flagellar components, but in a manner distinct from other means of stimulation. These results suggest that treating Chlamydomonas with the secretagogue alcian blue initiates a Ca2+ influx pathway and that prolonged treatment with alcian blue desensitizes the acid-shock-activated Ca2+ influx pathway to acid treatment. Alcian blue will thus be a useful excitatory ligand in future studies of receptor-mediated Ca2+ signaling in the Chlamydomonas flagellar regeneration system.  相似文献   

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