Cilia and Flagella: The Basics
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Transcript Cilia and Flagella: The Basics
Ethan Blackwood, Anna Menkis, Jeremy Cohen
Elenbaas Block 3
Thin tubular structures protruding from membranes
of some eukaryotic cells
Aid in movement
Structurally and functionally identical
Cilia
short in size
usually found in great quantities, covering entire cell
membrane
Flagella (eukaryotic)
much longer
usually one or two in a cell
Membrane: extensions of
cell membrane
Composed of microtubles,
organized as following:
Central axoneme with 2
microtubles
Surrounded by 9 microtuble
doublets
Axoneme and doublets
connected by radial spokes
Dynein molecules bridge
gaps between doublets
Figure 1: Interior structure of cilia and
flagella (Credit: Florida State
University)
Basal body (Kinetosome)
located at base
9 sets of 3 microtubules in radial
pattern
Extensions of internal cytoskeleton
Composed of the globular protein tubulin
Doublet: one full microtubule sharing a wall
with a smaller, partial microtubule
Basal body: structurally identical to centriole
(part of cytoskeleton of an animal cell)
1. Protein dynein is activated
by ATP
2. Dynein arms on one
microtubule doublet “grab”
an adjacent doublet and
“walk” along its length.
3. Doublets slide past each
other and bend
4. Cilium/flagellum bends
Figure 2: Movement of cilia and flagella
(Credit: Benjamin/Cummings)
In protista: movement of organism through
environment
Same function applies to motile (flagellated)
sperm cells
In multicellular eukaryota: transport
extracellular substances (e.g. water, food)
Cilia
Protista (e.g. paramecium)
Human respiratory tract, keeping dust and debris
out of lungs
Digestive systems (e.g. of snails)
Flagella (eukaryotic)
Protista (e.g. euglena)
Motile (flagellated) sperm cells of animals and some
plants
(Bacterial and archaeal flagella exist in some
prokaryotes)
Primary ciliary dyskinesia
Recessive genetic disorder
Defective cilia lining respiratory tract and fallopian tube
Susceptibility to chronic, recurring respiratory infections
Polycystic kidney disease
Defective cilia in the renal tube cells (kidney)
Cysts, enlargement of kidneys, possible damage to other organs
Bardet-Biedl syndrome
Problem in basal body caused by genetically mutated cilia
Numerous consequences, ranging from obesity to mental retardation
Ectopic pregnancy
Fallopian cilia fail to move fertilized ovum to uterus
Endosymbiotic model
Proposed by Lynn Margulis
Cilia and flagella are results of symbiosis between ancient eukaryotic and
prokaryotic cells
Supporting evidence (weaker)
▪ Mitochondria and chloroplasts as endosymbiotic examples
▪ Some eukaryotes symbiotically use bacteria as motility organelles
Endogenous model
Cilia and flagella developed from existing eukaryotic cytoskeleton
Supporting evidence (stronger)
▪ Both cilia/flagella and cytoskeleton contain dynein and tubulin
▪ All eukaryotic kingdoms contain motile, 9+2 flagella, suggesting that the
common eukaryotic ancestor had this trait
Campbell, Neil A. et al. Biology: Concepts & Connections. San Francisco:
Benjamin/Cummings, 2000.
“Cilium-related disease.” Cilium. New World Encyclopedia.
newworldencyclopedia.org/entry/Cilia
Davidson, Michael W. “Cilia and Flagella.” 2004. Molecular Expressions:
Exploring the World of Optics and Microscopy.
micro.magnet.fsu.edu/cells/ciliaandflagella/ciliaandflagella.html
“How important is endosymbiosis?” Understanding Evolution. University of
California Museum of Paleontology and National Center for Science
Education. evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/_0_0/endosymbiosis_06
Kaiser, Gary E. “Composition and Functions of Eukaryotic Cellular Structures:
Cilia and Flagella.” The Eukaryotic Cell. Community College of Baltimore
County.
student.ccbcmd.edu/courses/bio141/lecguide/unit3/eustruct/ciliaflag.html
(For further reading) Mitchell, David R. The Evolution of Eukaryotic Cilia and
Flagella as Motile and Sensory Organelles. 2006. SUNY Upstate Medical
University. upstate.edu/cdb/mitcheld/publications/Jekey_Mitchell.pdf