4.7 Article

Three-dimensional tracking of the ciliate Tetrahymena reveals the mechanism of ciliary stroke-driven helical swimming

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COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY
卷 4, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s42003-021-02756-0

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  1. MEXT National Bio-Resource Project
  2. JSPS KAKENHI [JP20K06635, JP21K19252]
  3. MEXT KAKENHI [JP19H05357, JP21H00386]

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Marumo and colleagues used three-dimensional tracking of fluorescent microbeads to visualize the helical swimming of the ciliate Tetrahymena, revealing that the beating pattern of the cilia determines the swimming behavior.
Helical swimming in free-space is a common behavior among microorganisms, such as ciliates that are covered with thousands hair-like motile cilia, and is thought to be essential for cells to orient directly to an external stimulus. However, a direct quantification of their three-dimensional (3D) helical trajectories has not been reported, in part due to difficulty in tracking 3D swimming behavior of ciliates, especially Tetrahymena with a small, transparent cell body. Here, we conducted 3D tracking of fluorescent microbeads within a cell to directly visualize the helical swimming exhibited by Tetrahymena. Our technique showed that Tetrahymena swims along a right-handed helical path with right-handed rolling of its cell body. Using the Tetrahymena cell permeabilized with detergent treatment, we also observed that influx of Ca2+ into cilia changed the 3D-trajectory patterns of Tetrahymena swimming, indicating that the beating pattern of cilia is the determining factor in its swimming behavior. Marumo and colleagues use three-dimensional tracking of fluorescent microbeads to visualize the helical swimming of the cilliate Tetrahymena. They reveal that the beating pattern of the cilia determines the swimming behavior.

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