Ciliary movement is caused by coordinated sliding interactions between the peripheral doublet microtubules of the axoneme. In demembranated organelles treated with trypsin and ATP, this sliding can be visualized during progressive disintegration. In this paper, microtubule sliding behavior resulting from various patterns of dynein arm activity and elastic link breakage is determined using a simplified model of the axoneme. The model consists of a cylindrical array of microtubules joined, initially, by elastic links, with the possibility of dynein arm interaction between microtubules. If no elastic links are broken, sliding can produce stable distortion of the model, which finds application to straight sections of a motile cilium. If some el...
AbstractThe movement of eukaryotic flagella is characterized by its oscillatory nature [1]. In sea u...
Regulation of ciliary and flagellar motility requires spatial control of dynein-driven microtubule s...
Molecular motors are natural nanomachines that use the free energy released from ATP hydrolysis to g...
Ciliary movement is caused by coordinated sliding interactions between the peripheral doublet microt...
Generating the complex waveforms characteristic of beating eukaryotic cilia and flagella requires sp...
AbstractThe beating of cilia and flagella is based on the localized sliding between adjacent outer d...
AbstractThe 9+2 configuration of axonemes is one of the most conserved structures of eukaryotic orga...
Coordinated sliding of microtubule doublets, driven by dynein motors, produces periodic beating of t...
The motile structure within eukaryotic cilia and flagella is the axoneme. This structure typically c...
Cilia and flagella are hair-like appendages of eukaryotic cells. They are actively bending structure...
In this paper, I consider the available vidence that, in certain cases, cytoplasmic microtubules mov...
AbstractA regular cycle of dynein-driven sliding, doublet separation, doublet reassociation, and res...
AbstractTo investigate the force generation properties of Chlamydomonas axonemal inner-arm dyneins i...
AbstractNormal left-right patterning in vertebrates depends on the rotational movement of nodal cili...
Flagellar dynein generates forces that produce relative shearing between doublet microtubules in the...
AbstractThe movement of eukaryotic flagella is characterized by its oscillatory nature [1]. In sea u...
Regulation of ciliary and flagellar motility requires spatial control of dynein-driven microtubule s...
Molecular motors are natural nanomachines that use the free energy released from ATP hydrolysis to g...
Ciliary movement is caused by coordinated sliding interactions between the peripheral doublet microt...
Generating the complex waveforms characteristic of beating eukaryotic cilia and flagella requires sp...
AbstractThe beating of cilia and flagella is based on the localized sliding between adjacent outer d...
AbstractThe 9+2 configuration of axonemes is one of the most conserved structures of eukaryotic orga...
Coordinated sliding of microtubule doublets, driven by dynein motors, produces periodic beating of t...
The motile structure within eukaryotic cilia and flagella is the axoneme. This structure typically c...
Cilia and flagella are hair-like appendages of eukaryotic cells. They are actively bending structure...
In this paper, I consider the available vidence that, in certain cases, cytoplasmic microtubules mov...
AbstractA regular cycle of dynein-driven sliding, doublet separation, doublet reassociation, and res...
AbstractTo investigate the force generation properties of Chlamydomonas axonemal inner-arm dyneins i...
AbstractNormal left-right patterning in vertebrates depends on the rotational movement of nodal cili...
Flagellar dynein generates forces that produce relative shearing between doublet microtubules in the...
AbstractThe movement of eukaryotic flagella is characterized by its oscillatory nature [1]. In sea u...
Regulation of ciliary and flagellar motility requires spatial control of dynein-driven microtubule s...
Molecular motors are natural nanomachines that use the free energy released from ATP hydrolysis to g...