Cell motility: Microtubules and actin microfilaments Flashcards

1
Q

Cell motility needs

A

Energy
Guidance
Mechanical interaction with something outside the cells
Microtubules (swimming) vs Microfilaments (crawling)

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2
Q

Microtubules: hollow tubes of alpha and beta tubulin

A

Rigid structure because of tube and bonding
Tubulin diameter - made up of one alpha tubulin (-) and one beta tubulin (+), is 24 nm
Always come as pair (alpha and beta) as are oppositely charged
13 profilaments make up a microtubule

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3
Q

Microtubules-based motility

A

Structure:
- Cilia
- Flagella
Cargoes:
- Of cells
- Protozoa
- Sperm
- Of fluids
- Respiratory
- Reproductive tract
Cilia used to move fluid around e.g. in trachea

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4
Q

Cilia and flagella structure

A

Same structure in cilia and flagella
Different length:
- Cilia: 2-10 x 0.25 μm
- Flagella: 100-200 x 0.25 μm
Major functional structure is the axoneme

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5
Q

The axoneme

A

9+2 microtubule assembly
9 doublets and 2 in the middle (inner pair)
There are radial spokes pointing from front outer doublet towards the inner pair on each doublet

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6
Q

Linking structure to function - the outer doublets

A

Dynein arms reach from the complete fibre of one doublet towards to incomplete fibres of the doublet in front of it
The outer arm is the one on the outside and the inner arm is the one of the inside
A complete (A) fibres is made of 13 protofilaments
An incomplete (B) fibres is made of 10 protofilaments
There is not always contact between the dynein arms, mainly on one side
Gives polarity between different sides of axinein

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7
Q

Dynein and sliding

A

In isolated doublet microtubules dynein and ATP produces microtubule sliding

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8
Q

Nexin crosslinkers

A

In normal flagellum dynein causes microtubule bending due to the addition of cross linking proteins

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9
Q

Cilia and flagella

A

Different waveforms:
- Cilia: has power strokes and then recovery strokes
- Flagella: Just has even waves across structure
Dynein arm-dependent functions:
- Inner arm: Waveform
- Outer arm: Power stroke

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10
Q

The axoneme in full

A

Transition zone - where microtubule ends and basal body begins
Basal bodies - link cytoskeleton to axoneme
(Look at diagram)

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11
Q

Basal bodies - go back over this section

A

9 x 3 microtubule array
9 triplets and no central ones
0.2 μm x 0.4 μm (diameter x length)
Basal body «< centriole «< centrosome

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12
Q

Centrosomes

A

In a cell that doesn’t have flagella just see microtubules throughout cell that doesn’t extent past outside cell and is embedded in the centrosome

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13
Q

Actin-based motility - A perspective of scale

A

Muscle - moves organism
Non-muscle - moves cells/tissues
Motility form:
- Motors
- Turnover

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14
Q

Actin filament structure

A

Fast growing plus end and a slow growing/disassembling minus end
ATP hydrolysed to ADP when the filament is polymerised
Look at diagram

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15
Q

Microtubule structure

A

Made of two tubulin monomers (one alpha and one beta)
Has a positive end that is slow growing/falling apart and negative end that is growing quickly during polymeraization

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16
Q

Assembly of polarised filaments - go back over

A

Pointed end (-ve)
Barbed end (+ve)

17
Q

Actin treadmilling

A

Need to go over

18
Q

Actin filaments vs microtubules

A

Look at table
Alpha subunits always buried so never comes into action of hydrolysed so that’s why it stays as GTP

19
Q

Actin-binding proteins

A

Monomers can become monomer-sequestering or monomer nucleating
Monomer nucleating can become monomer polymerizing
Monomer polymerizing can become membrane-binding, depolymerizing, filament-severing, bundling, cross-linking or end-blocking (capping)
look at diagram it makes it more clear

20
Q

Myosin

A

The microfilament motor protein of cytoskeletons and muscle
Dynein is motor protein of Cilia/flagella

21
Q

Myosin strucuture

A

Hinge domain where ATP used, allows head domain to move and attach/disattach to myosin binding site on actin filament
Myosin binding site is covered by a protein tropomyosin which is controlled by calcium and this means that the muscle is not always contracted
Look at diagram

22
Q

Actin based motility

A

Filopodium - parallel bundles
Lamellipodium - branched and crosslinked networks
Stress fibres - antiparallel contractile structures
Cortical actin
Cortex - crosslinked networks
Guidance is given by growth factors - Cell reaches out towards what the stimulus is