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Filming a Cellular Motor

By Sean Henahan, Access Excellence

c. elegans motorDavis, CA (4/23/99)- A new fluorescent microscopy technique for the first time reveals the workings of cellular motors as they ferry their cargo through living cells.

Special proteins, sometimes called cellular motors, perform an essential role in the formation and maintenance of cellular cilia, which perform many important functions in various cell and tissue types. One such protein, kinesin-II, delivers cargoes of macromolecular complexes, called 'rafts', in one direction along microtubules. Another motor protein, dynein, returns the rafts to their point of origin.

left- Worm head with schematic of C. elegans chemosensory cilia. info

Researchers at the University of California, Davis, developed a method for filming the microscopic action of these cellular motors. They stained the motors with green fluorescent protein and recorded their travels along sensory cilia in chemosensory neurons in living roundworms, Caenorhabditis elegans. This is the first time intracellular transport of a motor and its cargo have ever been recorded in a living system.

The cilia visualized in this experiment were a type found on tip of a nerve cell inside the head of a roundworm. These cilia identify chemicals that differentiate food and toxic materials. The motor proteins deliver signaling components and building materials for cilia maintenance, the researchers said.

"Being able to actually see what happens inside the cilia should help us learn more about the proteins in that transportation system and about the genes that produce them. Our results also demonstrate a technical method that other researchers could use," said Jonathan M. Scholey, Ph.D., Professor of Cell Biology, UC Davis.

The term cilia derives from the Latin word for eyelash. Besides the sensory cilia studied in this experiment, several other types of cilia are found in living organisms. Motile cilia help to drive the swimming of cells and embryos. Nodal cilia generate left-right asymmetry in vertebrate embryos.

The research appears in the April 22, 1999 issue of Nature.

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