| Literature DB >> 27114821 |
Galo Garcia1, Jeremy F Reiter1.
Abstract
The basal body is a highly organized structure essential for the formation of cilia. Basal bodies dock to a cellular membrane through their distal appendages (also known as transition fibers) and provide the foundation on which the microtubules of the ciliary axoneme are built. Consequently, basal body position and orientation dictates the position and orientation of its cilium. The heart of the basal body is the mother centriole, the older of the two centrioles inherited during mitosis and which is comprised of nine triplet microtubules arranged in a cylinder. Like all ciliated organisms, mice possess basal bodies, and studies of mouse basal body structure have made diverse important contributions to the understanding of how basal body structure impacts the function of cilia. The appendages and associated structures of mouse basal bodies can differ in their architecture from those of other organisms, and even between murine cell types. For example, basal bodies of immotile primary cilia are connected to daughter centrioles, whereas those of motile multiciliated cells are not. The last few years have seen the identification of many components of the basal body, and the mouse will continue to be an extremely valuable system for genetically defining their functions.Entities:
Keywords: Basal body; Basal foot; Daughter centriole; Distal appendage; Motile cilium; Mus musculus; Primary cilium; Rootlet; Subdistal appendage; Transition fiber
Year: 2016 PMID: 27114821 PMCID: PMC4843204 DOI: 10.1186/s13630-016-0038-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cilia ISSN: 2046-2530
Fig. 1Basal body ultrastructure. At the distal end of the basal body, distal appendages or transition fibers are blades that have ninefold symmetry and radiate outward from the triplet microtubules. Proximal to the distal appendages is the basal foot, an electron-dense and cone-shaped structure projecting from one side of the basal body. Some basal bodies have multiple basal feet. The proximal end of the basal body is attached to the striated rootlet and to filaments that connect the basal body to the proximal end of the daughter centriole. Motile cilia in multiciliated cells lack associated daughter centrioles. Image credits: serial-section electron micrographs of transition fibers, the basal foot, and proximal basal body were originally published in [44]. Electron micrograph illustrating the striated rootlet and the daughter centriole was originally published in [14]