Artykuł w czasopiśmie
Brak miniatury
Licencja

CC-BYCC-BY - Uznanie autorstwa

Cfap91-Dependent Stability of the RS2 and RS3 Base Proteins and Adjacent Inner Dynein Arms in Tetrahymena Cilia

Autor
Konopka, Anna
Bulska, Ewa
WŁOGA, DOROTA
Urbańska, Paulina
Osinka, Anna
JOACHIMIAK, EWA
Bicka, Marta
Data publikacji
2022
Abstrakt (EN)

Motile cilia and eukaryotic flagella are specific cell protrusions that are conserved from protists to humans. They are supported by a skeleton composed of uniquely organized microtubules—nine peripheral doublets and two central singlets (9 × 2 + 2). Microtubules also serve as docking sites for periodically distributed multiprotein ciliary complexes. Radial spokes, the T-shaped ciliary complexes, repeat along the outer doublets as triplets and transduce the regulatory signals from the cilium center to the outer doublet-docked dynein arms. Using the genetic, proteomic, and microscopic approaches, we have shown that lack of Tetrahymena Cfap91 protein affects stable docking/positioning of the radial spoke RS3 and the base of RS2, and adjacent inner dynein arms, possibly due to the ability of Cfap91 to interact with a molecular ruler protein, Ccdc39. The localization studies confirmed that the level of RS3-specific proteins, Cfap61 and Cfap251, as well as RS2-associated Cfap206, are significantly diminished in Tetrahymena CFAP91-KO cells. Cilia of Tetrahymena cells with knocked-out CFAP91 beat in an uncoordinated manner and their beating frequency is dramatically reduced. Consequently, CFAP91-KO cells swam about a hundred times slower than wild-type cells. We concluded that Tetrahymena Cfap91 localizes at the base of radial spokes RS2 and RS3 and likely plays a role in the radial spoke(s) positioning and stability.

Słowa kluczowe EN
axoneme
CFAP91
cilia
radial spoke
Tetrahymena
Dyscyplina PBN
nauki chemiczne
Czasopismo
Cells
Tom
11
Zeszyt
24
Strony od-do
4048
Data udostępnienia w otwartym dostępie
2022-12-14
Licencja otwartego dostępu
Uznanie autorstwa