The substructure of the outer dynein arm has been analyzed in quick-frozen deep-etch replicas of Tetrahymena and Chlamydomonas axonemes. Each arm is found to be composed of five morphologically discrete components: an elliptical head; two spherical feet; a slender stalk; and an interdynein linker. The feet make contact with the A microtubule of each doublet; the stalk contacts the B microtubule; the head lies between the feet and stalk; and the linker associates each arm with its neighbor. The spatial relationships between these five components are found to be distinctly different in rigor (ATP-depleted) versus relaxed (ATP- or vanadate plus ATP-treated) axonemes, and the stalk appears to alter its affinity for the B microtubule in the relaxed state. Images of living cilia attached to Tetrahymena cells show that the relaxed configuration is adopted in vivo. We relate our observations to morphological and experimental studies reported by others and propose several models that suggest how this newly described dynein morphology may relate to dynein function.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
1 December 1982
Article|
December 01 1982
Substructure of the outer dynein arm.
U W Goodenough
J E Heuser
Online ISSN: 1540-8140
Print ISSN: 0021-9525
J Cell Biol (1982) 95 (3): 798–815.
Connected Content
Corrected article
Correction
Corrected article
Correction
Corrected article
Correction
Corrected article
Correction
Corrected article
Correction
Citation
U W Goodenough, J E Heuser; Substructure of the outer dynein arm.. J Cell Biol 1 December 1982; 95 (3): 798–815. doi: https://doi.org/10.1083/jcb.95.3.798
Download citation file:
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Client Account
You could not be signed in. Please check your email address / username and password and try again.
Could not validate captcha. Please try again.
Sign in via your Institution
Sign in via your InstitutionSuggested Content
Email alerts
Connected Content
Advertisement
Advertisement