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Page 1: Chapter 4.11

Chapter 4.11

How Do Cells Move?

AP BiologyFall 2010

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Objectives

• Describe the differences between psudopods, cilia, and flagella

• Understand the mechanism which moves cilia and flagella

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Moving Along with Motor Proteins

• Kinesines, dyneins, myosins, and other motor proteins function as the freight engines

• Energy from ATP fuels the movement • Some motor proteins move chromosomes • Others slide one microtubule over another

and others inch along tracks inside nerve cells

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Cilia, Flagella, and False Feet

• Both flagella and cilia are motile structures that extend from the surface of many cells and is completely sheathed by an extension of the plasma membrane

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Cilia

• Cilia: short, numerous, and provide locomotion for free-living cells or may move surrounding water and particles if the ciliated cell is anchored

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Cilia

• Ciliated protists swim by beating their many cilia in synchrony

• Cilia in certain areas of the lungs beat nonstop

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Flagella

• Flagella: quite long, not usually numerous, and are found on one-celled protistans and animal sperm cells

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9 + 2 Array

• Microtubular extensions of the plasma membrane have a 9 + 2 cross-sectional array that arises from a centriole extending below the array as a basal body

• 9 pairs of microtubules form a ring around a central pair, all stabilized by protein spokes and links

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9 + 2 Array

• Centrosome gives rise to a centriole • Barrel shaped structure produces and

organizes microtubules into the 9 + 2 array, then it remains below the finished array as a basal body

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Cilia and Flagella Movement

• Move by sliding mechanism• Dynein arms project from each pair in the outer ring • When ATP energizes them, arms grab microtubule pair

in front of them, tilt in short, downward stroke, then let go

• Bound pair slides down, its arms bind the pair in front of it, forcing it to slide down– and so on around the ring

• Microtubules cannot slide too far, but bends a bit • Sliding motion converted to bending motion

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Psudopods

• Pseudopods (flase feet): temporary lobes that project from the cell, used in locomotion and food capture – Macrophages and amoebas – Advance in steady direction as microfilaments

inside them are elongated– Motor proteins attached to microfilaments are

dragging the plasma membrane along with them in direction of interest

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Review

1. What is the difference between cilia, flagella, and false feet?

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Answers

1. Flagella are quite long, not usually numerous, and are found on one-celled protistans and animal sperm cells. Cilia short, numerous, and provide locomotion for free-living cells or may move surrounding water and particles if the ciliated cell is anchored. Pseudopods are temporary lobes that project from the cell, used in locomotion and food capture.