PF20 gene product contains WD repeats and localizes to the intermicrotubule bridges in Chlamydomonas flagella.
Open Access
- 1 March 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Cell Biology (ASCB) in Molecular Biology of the Cell
- Vol. 8 (3) , 455-467
- https://doi.org/10.1091/mbc.8.3.455
Abstract
The central pair of microtubules and their associated structures play a significant role in regulating flagellar motility. To begin a molecular analysis of these components, we generated central apparatus-defective mutants in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii using insertional mutagenesis. One paralyzed mutant recovered in our screen contains an allele of a previously identified mutation, pf20. Mutant cells have paralyzed flagella, and the entire central apparatus is missing in isolated axonemes. We have cloned the wild-type PF20 gene and confirmed its identity by rescuing the pf20 mutant phenotype upon transformation. Rescued transformants were wild type in motility and in axonemal ultrastructure. A cDNA clone containing a single, long open reading frame was obtained and sequenced. Database searches using the predicted 606-amino acid sequence of PF20 indicate that the protein contains five contiguous WD repeats. These repeats are found in a number of proteins with diverse cellular functions including beta-transducin and dynein intermediate chains. An antibody was raised against a fusion protein expressed from the cloned cDNA. Immunogold labeling of wild-type axonemes indicates that the PF20 protein is localized along the length of the C2 microtubule on the intermicrotubule bridges connecting the two central microtubules. We suggest that the PF20 gene product is a new member of the family of WD repeat proteins and is required for central microtubule assembly and/or stability and flagellar motility.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Axonemal dyneins: assembly, organization, and regulationCurrent Opinion in Cell Biology, 1996
- The CRY1 gene in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii: structure and use as a dominant selectable marker for nuclear transformation.Molecular and Cellular Biology, 1994
- Isolation of a Miller–Dicker lissencephaly gene containing G protein β-subunit-like repeatsNature, 1993
- Flagellar radial spoke: A model molecular genetic system for studying organelle assemblyCell Motility, 1993
- Ciliary microtubule capping structures contain a mammalian kinetochore antigen.The Journal of cell biology, 1990
- Stable nuclear transformation of Chlamydomonas using the Chlamydomonas gene for nitrate reductase.The Journal of cell biology, 1989
- A convenient moderate-scale procedure for obtaining DNA from bacteriophage lambda.1989
- Flagellar elongation and shortening in Chlamydomonas. III. structures attached to the tips of flagellar microtubules and their relationship to the directionality of flagellar microtubule assembly.The Journal of cell biology, 1977
- Ciliary inter-microtubule bridgesJournal of Cell Science, 1976
- Assembly of chick brain tubulin onto flagellar microtubules from Chlamydomonas and sea urchin sperm.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1975