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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2022 Apr 28.
Published in final edited form as: Cytoskeleton (Hoboken). 2021 Apr 28;78(3):77–96. doi: 10.1002/cm.21662

Table 1.

Composition of IDAs in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii

IDA Composition of Chlamydomonas reinhardtiia
Species a b c d e f/I1 g DHC3 DHC4 DHC11 DHC12
IDA type Major Major Major Major Major Major Major Minor Minor Minor Minor
Head type Single-headed Single-headed Single-headed Single-headed Single-headed Double-headed Single-headed Single-headed Single-headed Single-headed Single-headed
MT rotation + + + + +/−b + N/Ac N/A N/A N/A
MT bending + + N/A N/A N/A N/A
HC gene DHC6 DHC5 DHC9 (IDA9) DHC2 DHC8 DHC1 (PF9/IDA1)
DHC10 (IDA2)
DHC7 DHC3 DHC4 DHC11 DHC12 (DHC1a)
Other name I2’ I3’ I2A I2’ I2B None I3 None None None None
ICs/LCs IC140
IC138
IC97
p44
Actin Actin (NAP)d Actin Actin Actin Actin (NAP) (Actin)e (Actin) (Actin) (Actin)
p38
FAP120
p28 p28 p28 (p28) (p28)
MOT7
Centrin Centrin Centrin (Centrin) (Centrin)
TCTEX1
TCTEX2b
LC7a
LC7b
LC8
b

Negligible rotation at high IDA f/I1 densities, while erratic rotation was observable at low IDA f/I1 densities (Kotani et al., 2007).

c

Not analyzed previously.

d

NAP serves as a subunit of IDAs b and g in the absence of actin [in the ida5 mutant (Kato-Minoura et al., 1998)].

e

Parentheses for LCs of minor IDAs mean that they are not fully experimentally determined (Kamiya & Yagi, 2014).