Lee Elijah H, Ouyang Xiaoyi, Howard Jonathon
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
Department of Physics, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut.
Biophys J. 2025 Aug 5. doi: 10.1016/j.bpj.2025.07.037.
Cilia and flagella support bending waves that propagate along their lengths. In short cilia, such as those of the motile biflagellate green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, the wavelength of the ciliary beat is approximately proportional to the length of the cilium. On the other hand, for the longer cilia of other organisms, such as sea urchin and mammalian sperm, the wavelength is shorter than the length, so that each cilium supports multiple wavelengths. These different wavelength/length ratios could be due to genetic or biochemical differences between species or due to length-dependent differences in the underlying physics of motility. To distinguish between these possibilities, we measured the beat wavelength in isolated, reactivated cilia from Chlamydomonas mutants in which ciliary length is mis-regulated, leading to cilia that are shorter or longer than the wild-type. This allowed us to probe the transition between short- and long-length behavior in a single organism rather than comparing different organisms. To test quantitatively the relationship between ciliary length and wavelength, we developed a Fourier-based estimator for the beat wavelength, accurate in the regime where the length is greater than half the wavelength. We confirmed that for shorter cilia, up to 15 μm, the wavelength of the dynamic beat increased in proportion to ciliary length, as previously found. By contrast, in lf4 mutants whose cilia are up to 25 μm in length, the wavelength saturated at 15 μm. Similar saturation was observed at both high and low ATP concentrations. These findings likely suggest that the physics of motility is important for determining the wavelength. We propose that the saturating wavelength is a trade-off between maximizing swimming speed (by making the wavelength as short as possible) and minimizing power consumption (by making the wavelength as long as possible).
纤毛和鞭毛能够支持沿其长度方向传播的弯曲波。在短纤毛中,比如运动型双鞭毛绿藻莱茵衣藻的纤毛,纤毛摆动的波长大约与纤毛的长度成正比。另一方面,对于其他生物体的较长纤毛,比如海胆和哺乳动物的精子,其波长比纤毛长度短,因此每个纤毛支持多个波长。这些不同的波长/长度比可能是由于物种间的遗传或生化差异,或者是由于运动基本物理原理中与长度相关的差异。为了区分这些可能性,我们测量了莱茵衣藻突变体中分离并重新激活的纤毛的摆动波长,在这些突变体中纤毛长度调控异常,导致纤毛比野生型短或长。这使我们能够在单个生物体中探究短长度和长长度行为之间的转变,而不是比较不同的生物体。为了定量测试纤毛长度与波长之间的关系,我们开发了一种基于傅里叶的摆动波长估计器,在长度大于波长一半的情况下是准确的。我们证实,对于长度达15μm的较短纤毛,动态摆动的波长如先前发现的那样与纤毛长度成比例增加。相比之下,在纤毛长度达25μm的lf4突变体中,波长在15μm时达到饱和。在高ATP浓度和低ATP浓度下均观察到类似的饱和现象。这些发现可能表明运动的物理原理对于确定波长很重要。我们提出,饱和波长是在最大化游泳速度(通过使波长尽可能短)和最小化能量消耗(通过使波长尽可能长)之间的一种权衡。