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Oscillatory movement of eukaryotic flagella is caused by dynein-driven microtubule sliding in the axoneme. The mechanical feedback from the bending itself is involved in the regulation of dynein activity, the main mechanism of which is thought to be switching of the activity of dynein between the two sides of the central pair microtubules. To test this, we developed an experimental system using elastase-treated axonemes of sperm flagella, which have a large Ca2+-induced principal bend (P-bend) at the base. On photoreleasing ATP from caged ATP, they slid apart into two bundles of doublets. When the distal overlap region of the slid bundles was bent in the direction opposite to the basal P-bend, backward sliding of the thinner bundle was induced along the flagellum including the bent region. The velocity of the backward sliding was significantly lower than that of the forward sliding, supporting the idea that the dynein activity alternated between the two sides of the central pair on bending. Our results show that the combination of the direction of bending and the conformational state of dynein-microtubule interaction induce the switching of the dynein activity in flagella, thus providing the basis for flagellar oscillation.
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JCS ePress
online publication date 5 Aug 2008
doi: 10.1242/jcs.031195
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121/17/2833
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Research Article
Mechanism of flagellar oscillation - bending-induced switching of dynein activity in elastase-treated axonemes of sea urchin sperm
* Author for correspondence (e-mail: chikako{at}biol.s.u-tokyo.ac.jp)
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A. Gokhale, M. Wirschell, and W. S. Sale
Regulation of dynein-driven microtubule sliding by the axonemal protein kinase CK1 in Chlamydomonas flagella
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817 - 824.
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R. S. Patel-King and S. M. King
An outer arm dynein light chain acts in a conformational switch for flagellar motility
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M. Wirschell, C. Yang, P. Yang, L. Fox, H.-a. Yanagisawa, R. Kamiya, G. B. Witman, M. E. Porter, and W. S. Sale
IC97 Is a Novel Intermediate Chain of I1 Dynein That Interacts with Tubulin and Regulates Interdoublet Sliding
Mol. Biol. Cell,
July 1, 2009;
20(13):
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