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Direct imaging of intraflagellar-transport turnarounds reveals that motors detach, diffuse, and reattach to opposite-direction trains

26

Citations

53

References

2021

Year

Abstract

Significance Primary cilia are important organelles that exist in almost all eukaryotic cells. Intraflagellar transport (IFT) is a motor-protein–driven bidirectional intracellular transport mechanism in cilia. Previous studies have shown that motors in Caenorhabditis elegans chemosensory cilia undergo rapid turnarounds to effectively work together in driving orderly IFT. The mechanism of motor turnarounds has, however, remained unclear. Here, using a combination of advanced fluorescence imaging and single-molecule analysis, we directly show that the individual turnarounds are due to motors switching between opposite-direction IFT trains. Furthermore, we show that switching events consist of motors detaching from a train, diffusing to another one followed by attachment. This directly demonstrates that motors switch trains by diffusion, which clarifies the mechanism of motor turnarounds.

References

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