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Studies on the eel sperm flagellum. 3. Vibratile motility and rotatory bending

โœ Scribed by Woolley, D.M.


Book ID
101230256
Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1998
Tongue
English
Weight
229 KB
Volume
39
Category
Article
ISSN
0886-1544

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โœฆ Synopsis


A further account is given of motility in this 9 ฯฉ 0 flagellum, where the axoneme is of special interest because it is powered by only inner dynein arms. Under some circumstances, normal motility is inactivated and yet the flagellum swims (or appears to glide) forward, albeit much more slowly. The propulsive thrust in these cases is due to a vibratile motion of the flagellum. Vibratile motion has a very small amplitude and is very rapid, but a frequency could not be determined stroboscopically. Provided that the sperm head is in place, a vibratile sperm can be stimulated mechanically such that it instantly resumes and continues normal motility. This indicates that a suprathreshold deformation of the axoneme triggers normal motility and that the threshold is normally continuously exceeded by a selfgenerated fluid-mechanical interaction in which the sperm head plays a necessary part. Without a sperm head, the flagellum propels itself by vibratile motion. Some vibratile sperm, found to be stuck by their heads, perform also a slow rotatory (clockwise) bending at the base of the flagellum. When this happens, there is no rotation of the axonemal substance. Therefore, this is interpreted as sequential, clockwise, self-perpetuating, circumferential activity around the arrays of inner dynein arms. The phenomenon is considered to be a restricted representation of the rapid clockwise (i.e., sinistral) helical wave of normal motility. Cell Motil.


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Studies on the eel sperm flagellum. 2. T
โœ Woolley, D.M. ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 1998 ๐Ÿ› John Wiley and Sons ๐ŸŒ English โš– 284 KB

The sperm flagellum of Anguilla anguilla lacks outer dynein arms, radial spokes and central structures. Its characteristic motion has been obtained by studying cells swimming perpendicularly against, but not adhering to, the coverslip. The flagellum generates a sinistrally helical wave of rising, th