Calcium Regulates the Regeneration of Cilia in Tetrahymena thermophila

Abstract
A study of calcium metabolism in Tetrahymena during the regeneration of cilia evidenced that the process in inhibited by nifedipine and trifluoperazine. This suggests that calcium ions play an important regulatory role in this process. This was confirmed by studies on calcium uptake and efflux which showed that there was a net increase in calcium uptake prior to the reinitiation of motility. The increase coincided with a period of sensitivity to the calcium antagonist TMB-8 and with an increase in the intracellular level of cGMP. The process was also inhibited by neomycin and stimulated by phorbol esters, which suggests that hydrolysis of phosphatidylinositol phosphates may take place as part of the calcium regulatory network during the regeneration of cilia.