Cell motility Flashcards

1
Q

What does cell motility require?

A
  • energy
  • guidance
  • mechanical interaction with something out the cell
  • swimming vs crawling
  • microtubules vs actin microfilaments
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2
Q

Describe what is required for cells to swim?

A

microtubules

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3
Q

Describe what is required for cells to swim?

A

actin microfilaments

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4
Q

What are microtubules composed off?

A

hollow tubes of a & b tubulin (they alternate)
- 13 protofilaments
- has intrinsic polarity due to the 2 tubulin subunits

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5
Q

What is the structure of microtubule-based motility?

A

Cilia & Flagella

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6
Q

Where is flagella used in cells?

A

sperm/ protozoa

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7
Q

Where is cilia used in cells?

A

respiratory tract/reproductive tract

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8
Q

What is the difference between cilia & flagella?

A

they have the same structure, but they have different lengths:
cilia - 2-10 x 0.25um
flagella - 100-200 x 0.25um

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9
Q

What is larger - cilia or flagella?

A

flagella (10 times larger)

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10
Q

What is the major functional structure of the cilia & flagella?

A

Axoneme

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11
Q

What is the microtubular arrangement of the axoneme?

A

9+2 microtubule assembly

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12
Q

Describe the 9+2 microtubule assembly composition

A
  • 9 outer doublets
  • Radial spokes
  • Inner pair
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13
Q

How many protofilaments do complete (A) fibres have?

A

13 protofilaments

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14
Q

How many protofilaments do incomplete (B) fibres have?

A

10

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15
Q

What is dynein arms?

A

the motor protein in microtubules

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16
Q

What links the 2 central doublets?

A

Dynein - the presence of ATP allows sliding of microtubules (in separate directions)

17
Q

What are the 2 dynein arm-dependent functions?

A

Inner arm - waveform
Outer arm - power

18
Q

What is the transition zone?

A

where flagella/cilia meets the plasma membrane

19
Q

What is the function of basal bodies?

A

cell motility

20
Q

What happen if actin acts on a muscle?

A

moves organism

21
Q

What happen if actin acts on a non-muscle?

A

moves cells/tissues

22
Q

Does an actin monomer have polarity?

A

Yes

23
Q

What is in the middle of an actin subunit?

A

bound nucleotide (ATP)

24
Q

What can occur to the ATP molecule in the middle of a G actin filament?

A

It can be hydrolysed released energy and leaving ADP

25
Q

What can occur to the GTP in microtubules?

A

can be converted to GDP

26
Q

What is actin treadmilling?

A

addition of actin at one end, while removing at the other end also occurs.

27
Q

What is larger - an actin filament or microtubule?

A

Microtubule

28
Q

What is the difference in the nucleotide in actin vs microtubule?

A

Actin - ATP
Microtubule - GTP

29
Q

What does profilin (actin-binding protein) inhibit?

A

profilin inhibits nucleation

29
Q

What regulates actin dynamics?

A

Accessory proteins

29
Q

What does profilin bind to?

A

ATP actin

30
Q

Describe how actin-based motility works?

A

Filopodium - narrow projections

Lamellipodium - broader projections of membrane

Stress fibres - quite static - transmit force & allow cell to be contractile

Cortical actin ring - around edge of cell

31
Q
A
31
Q
A