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The World of Protozoa, Rotifera, Nematoda and Oligochaeta

Ref ID : 413

Eichenlaub Ritter, U. and Tucker, J.B.; Microtubules with more than 13 protofilaments in the dividing nuclei of ciliates. Nature 307:60-62, 1984

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Microtubules are largely composed of proteins called tubulins. These are stacked in linear arrays called protofilaments (p). Most microtubules have precisely 13p (ref. 1). The 'incomplete' B and C microtubules (10 or 11p) of cilia, flagella, basal bodies and centrioles are widespread exceptions. Very few examples of 'complete' microtubules with more, or less, than 13p have been found. However, the 'ciliate cell' includes a larger number of highly differentiated types of microtubule arrays than most other cell types. The present study was undertaken to ascertain whether there is variation in p number in two ciliates. In both, all complete cytoplasmic microtubules examined have 13p but microtubules with 13-16p are present in the nucleoplasm of dividing nuclei. These features are probably common to ciliates in general because the free-living hymenostone Paramecium tetraurelia and the parasitic heterotrich Nycotherus ovalis are not closely related in terms of taxonomic criteria or life-style.