S. Lanzavecchia et al., 3-DIMENSIONAL RECONSTRUCTIONS OF ACCESSORY TUBULES OBSERVED IN THE SPERM AXONEMES OF 2 INSECT SPECIES, Journal of structural biology, 113(3), 1994, pp. 225-237
The sperm-tail axonemes of several insect species are known to have ac
cessory microtubules with a diameter greater than that of ordinary cyt
oplasmatic microtubules. This provides an opportunity to investigate t
he three-dimensional organization of naturally occurring tubules with
more than 13 protofilaments. For this purpose electron micrographs of
negatively stained axonemes of a dipteran species, Exechia seriata, an
d a trichopteran, Limnephilus bipunctatus, were taken for computer ana
lysis. The original micrographs contained long stretches of somewhat c
urved microtubules that, in a first step, were straightened by an appr
opriate algorithm. The results were used to determine helical models f
rom spectral analysis, to obtain filtered images of the front and back
tubule sides, and to compute three-dimensional reconstructions by Fou
rier methods. The tubule segments used in the present study were about
500 nm long. All accessory microtubules analyzed consisted of a doubl
e-stranded helix of clearly distinguishable heterodimers with a pitch
of 16 nm and skewing protofilaments. Most segments of the dipteran acc
essory tubules consisted of 16 protofilaments, although 15 were found
in some images portraying the distal region of the flagellum. The acce
ssory tubules of the trichopteran had 19 protofilaments. The repeat pe
riods that describe the skewness of protofilaments (128 nm for 16 and
320 nm for 19 protofilaments) are in any case considerably thicker tha
n an electron microscopical section which encompasses about 50 nm. It
is hence valid to count the number of protofilaments in cross-sectione
d axonemes. (C) 1994 Academic Press, Inc.