mSphere (Dec 2024)
Chlamydomonas IC97, an intermediate chain of the flagellar dynein f/I1, is required for normal flagellar and cellular motility
Abstract
ABSTRACT Motile flagella (also called “motile cilia”) play a variety of important roles in lower and higher eukaryotes, including cellular motility and fertility. Flagellar motility is driven by several species of the gigantic motor-protein complexes, flagellar dyneins, that reside within these organelles. Among the flagellar-dynein species, a hetero-dimeric dynein called “IDA f/I1” has been shown to be particularly important in controlling the flagellar waveform, and defects in this dynein species in humans cause ciliopathies such as multiple morphological abnormalities of the flagella and asthenoteratozoospermia. IDA f/I1 is composed of many subunits, including two HCs (HCα and HCβ) and three ICs (IC140, IC138, and IC97), and among the three ICs of IDA f/I1, the exact molecular function(s) of IC97 in flagellar motility is not well understood. In this study, we isolated a Chlamydomonas mutant lacking IC97 and analyzed the phenotypes. The ic97 mutant phenocopied several aspects of the previously isolated IDA-f/I1-related mutants in Chlamydomonas and showed slow swimming compared to the wild type but retained the ability to phototaxis. Further analysis revealed that the mutant had low flagellar beat frequency and miscoordination between the two (cis- and trans-) flagella. In addition, the mutant cells swam in a comparatively straight path compared to the wild-type cells. Taken together, our results highlight the importance of proper assembly of IC97 in the IDA-f/I1 complex for the regulation of flagellar and cellular motility in Chlamydomonas and provide valuable insights into both the molecular functions of IC97 orthologs in higher eukaryotes and the pathogenetic mechanisms of human ciliopathies caused by IDA-f/I1 defects.IMPORTANCEIDA f/I1 is a hetero-dimeric flagellar dynein that is particularly important for the regulation of flagellar waveform and whose defects are associated with human ciliopathies. IC97 is an evolutionarily conserved intermediate chain of IDA f/I1, but the detailed molecular functions of IC97 in flagellar motility have not been elucidated. In this study, mutational and biochemical analyses of the previously uncharacterized Chlamydomonas ic97 mutant revealed that IC97 is required for both the normal flagellar and cellular motility. In particular, IC97 appears to play an important role in both the control of flagellar beat frequency and the coordination between the two (cis- and trans-) flagella in Chlamydomonas. Our results provide important insights into the regulation of IDA-f/I1 activity by IC97 and the pathogenetic mechanisms of human ciliopathies caused by IDA-f/I1 defects.
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