Hennessey Todd M, Kim Daniel Y, Oberski Danial J, Hard Robert, Rankin Scott A, Pennock David G
Department of Biological Sciences, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, USA.
Cell Motil Cytoskeleton. 2002 Dec;53(4):281-8. doi: 10.1002/cm.10076.
Cilia in many organisms undergo a phenomenon called ciliary reversal during which the cilia reverse the beat direction, and the cell swims backwards. Ciliary reversal is typically caused by a depolarizing stimulus that ultimately leads to a rise in intraciliary Ca++ levels. It is this increase in intraciliary Ca++ that triggers ciliary reversal. However, the mechanism by which an increase in intraciliary Ca++ causes ciliary reversal is not known. We have previously mutated the DYH6 gene of Tetrahymena thermophila by targeted gene knockout and shown that the knockout mutants (KO6 mutants) are missing inner arm dynein 1 (I1). In this study, we show that KO6 mutants do not swim backward in response to depolarizing stimuli. In addition to being unable to swim backwards, KO6 mutants swim forward at approximately one half the velocity of wild-type cells. However, the ciliary beat frequency in KO6 mutants is indistinguishable from that of wild-type cells, suggesting that the slow forward swimming of KO6 mutants is caused by an altered waveform rather than an altered beat frequency. Live KO6 cells are also able to increase and decrease their swim speeds in response to stimuli, suggesting that some aspects of their swim speed regulation mechanisms are intact. Detergent-permeabilized KO6 mutants fail to undergo Ca++-dependent ciliary reversals and do not show Ca++-dependent changes in swim speed after MgATP reactivation, indicating that the axonemal machinery required for these responses is insensitive to Ca++ in KO6 mutants. We conclude that Tetrahymena inner arm dynein 1 is not only an essential part of the Ca++-dependent ciliary reversal mechanism but it also may contribute to Ca++-dependent changes in swim speed and to the formation of normal waveform during forward swimming.
许多生物体中的纤毛会经历一种称为纤毛逆转的现象,在此期间纤毛会逆转摆动方向,细胞则向后游动。纤毛逆转通常由去极化刺激引起,最终导致纤毛内钙离子(Ca++)水平升高。正是纤毛内Ca++的这种增加触发了纤毛逆转。然而,纤毛内Ca++增加导致纤毛逆转的机制尚不清楚。我们之前通过靶向基因敲除使嗜热四膜虫的DYH6基因发生突变,并表明敲除突变体(KO6突变体)缺少内臂动力蛋白1(I1)。在本研究中,我们表明KO6突变体不会因去极化刺激而向后游动。除了无法向后游动外,KO6突变体向前游动时的速度约为野生型细胞的一半。然而,KO6突变体的纤毛摆动频率与野生型细胞并无差异,这表明KO6突变体向前游动缓慢是由波形改变而非摆动频率改变所致。活的KO6细胞也能够根据刺激增加和降低其游动速度,这表明它们的游动速度调节机制的某些方面是完整的。经去污剂通透处理的KO6突变体无法进行依赖Ca++的纤毛逆转,并且在MgATP重新激活后也未表现出依赖Ca++的游动速度变化,这表明这些反应所需的轴丝机制对KO6突变体中的Ca++不敏感。我们得出结论,嗜热四膜虫内臂动力蛋白1不仅是依赖Ca++的纤毛逆转机制的重要组成部分,而且可能有助于依赖Ca++的游动速度变化以及向前游动期间正常波形的形成。