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The Journal of Cell Biology, Vol 59, 267-275, Copyright © 1973 by Rockefeller University Press

ARTICLE

MICROTUBULES: EVIDENCE FOR 13 PROTOFILAMENTS



Lewis G. Tilney 1, Joseph Bryan 1, Doris J. Bush 1, Keigi Fujiwara 1, Mark S. Mooseker 1, Douglas B. Murphy 1, and Daniel H. Snyder 1

1 From the Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19174

When microtubules are fixed in glutaraldehyde in the presence of tannic acid and thin sections cut, the subunit structure of the microtubule is readily observed without the need of image reinforcement. Seven types of microtubules were analyzed: those in the heliozoan axoneme, the mitotic apparatus, the contractile axostyle, repolymerized microtubules derived from the chick brain, the central pair in flagella, and the A tubules of flagella and the basal body. In all cases microtubules were composed of 13 equally spaced protofilaments. The B tubules in flagella and the basal body appear to be composed of 11 subunits. The connections of the B to the A and the C to the B are described. A model of a microtubule is presented.

Submitted on March 23, 1973
Revised on July 11, 1973


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