The cilium and the flagellum are conserved organelles that play fundamental roles in cellular signaling, sensing, and motility. Cilia and flagella have a complex microtubule-based axoneme that includes nine peripheral microtubule doublets, each comprised of a complete A-tubule and an incomplete B-tubule. However, the function of this distinctive geometry has remained unknown until now. In a recent study, Ludek Stepanek and Gaia Pigino use the model organism Chlamydomonas to reveal a new understanding of the functional significance of the A- and B-tubule structure [Reference Stepanek and Pigino1].
It is known that ciliary microtubule doublets function as “railways” for intraflagellar transport (IFT), the process required for the assembly and disassembly of cilia. Large protein complexes, known as IFT trains, rapidly traverse up and down the cilium to move ciliary “building blocks” between the cell body and the distal tip of the cilium where the assembly of the cilium occurs. Electron microscopy (EM) has shown that the IFT trains move along the doublets. However, it has not been clear how the railway is organized to avoid collisions between anterograde and retrograde trains.
Stepanek and Pigino used total internal fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy to show that trains tagged with green fluorescent protein interacted with each other in both the anterograde and retrograde directions. However, trains headed in the opposite direction did not interact, suggesting that a mechanism must exist to prevent collisions. Because TIRF microscopy does not provide sufficient resolution to demonstrate a relationship between trains and microtubules, the authors took the correlative light and EM (CLEM) approach. In order to provide sufficient spatiotemporal resolution to analyze IFT trains, they developed a new method to provide millisecond resolution in correlative TIRF and three-dimensional (3D) EM. The experimental cell was rapidly fixed with glutaraldehyde during time-lapse TIRF imaging of IFT trains. The position of each fixed IFT train was cross-referenced to its direction of movement just before fixation. The same cell was then prepared for EM tomography. They obtained sufficient spatial resolution to observe the structural details of each train and its interaction with microtubules. In this manner they identified anterograde and retrograde trains unambiguously, as well as trains that remained stationary (Figure 1).
Using these and other techniques Stepanek and Pigino showed that each microtubule doublet is used as a bidirectional double-track railway with anterograde IFT trains moving toward the ciliary tip along B-microtubules and retrograde trains moving toward the cell body along A-microtubules. Because A- and B-microtubules are thought to share the same tubulin arrangement, they suggested that IFT trains recognize specific post-translational modifications on A- versus B-microtubules. Thus, the microtubule doublet geometry provides direction-specific rails to coordinate bidirectional transport of ciliary and flagellar components. At the very least, this study highlights the critical role played by microtubule doublets in the assembly of cilia and flagella.