Cellular and molecular mechanics of gliding locomotion in eukaryotes

Int Rev Cytol. 2006:251:79-129. doi: 10.1016/S0074-7696(06)51003-4.

Abstract

Gliding is a form of substrate-dependent cell locomotion exploited by a variety of disparate cell types. Cells may glide at rates well in excess of 1 microm/sec and do so without the gross distortion of cellular form typical of amoeboid crawling. In the absence of a discrete locomotory organelle, gliding depends upon an assemblage of molecules that links cytoplasmic motor proteins to the cell membrane and thence to the appropriate substrate. Gliding has been most thoroughly studied in the apicomplexan parasites, including Plasmodium and Toxoplasma, which employ a unique assortment of proteins dubbed the glideosome, at the heart of which is a class XIV myosin motor. Actin and myosin also drive the gliding locomotion of raphid diatoms (Bacillariophyceae) as well as the intriguing form of gliding displayed by the spindle-shaped cells of the primitive colonial protist Labyrinthula. Chlamydomonas and other flagellated protists are also able to abandon their more familiar swimming locomotion for gliding, during which time they recruit a motility apparatus independent of that driving flagellar beating.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Actins / metabolism
  • Animals
  • Apicomplexa / pathogenicity
  • Apicomplexa / physiology
  • Apicomplexa / ultrastructure
  • Chlamydomonas / cytology
  • Chlamydomonas / physiology
  • Diatoms / physiology
  • Diatoms / ultrastructure
  • Eukaryotic Cells / cytology
  • Eukaryotic Cells / physiology*
  • Humans
  • Locomotion / physiology*
  • Molecular Motor Proteins / metabolism
  • Myosins / metabolism
  • Protozoan Proteins / metabolism

Substances

  • Actins
  • Molecular Motor Proteins
  • Protozoan Proteins
  • Myosins