Curriculum
Module 05 · 65 min
Cytoskeleton & Cell Motility
Actin, microtubules, intermediate filaments — and the motors that walk on them.
CoreClinicalResearch
Topics
What this module covers
- 01Actin polymerisation: ATP/ADP states, treadmilling, Arp2/3, formins
- 02Microtubule dynamic instability, GTP cap, +TIPs, MAPs
- 03Intermediate filaments (keratins, vimentin, lamins, neurofilaments, desmin)
- 04Motors: myosin, kinesin, dynein — directionality and cargoes
- 05Lamellipodia vs filopodia; Rho/Rac/Cdc42 GTPases in migration
- 06Cilia and flagella; ciliopathies
Deep dives
Lesson sub-pages
Learning objectives
By the end of this module you will be able to
- L01Match a cytoskeletal drug (cytochalasin, latrunculin, paclitaxel, vinblastine, colchicine) to its mechanism.
- L02Predict the consequence of a mutation in a specific intermediate filament for a specific tissue.
- L03Explain why ciliary defects produce a remarkably consistent set of organ malformations.
Expected takeaways
What you should walk away believing
- →The cytoskeleton is mechanically active and biochemically signalling — not a 'scaffold'.
- →Intermediate filament mutations produce tissue-specific fragility (skin, muscle, neuron, nucleus).
- →Microtubule-targeting drugs are central to oncology and gout; resistance often emerges via β-tubulin isoforms or efflux.
Core summary
At the Core level
The cytoskeleton is three filament systems with overlapping roles: actin for shape and locomotion (sub-second), microtubules for transport and division (seconds-minutes), intermediate filaments for mechanical resilience (hours-days). Each is dynamic, regulated, and drugged at the bedside.
Evidence-graded claims
Claims, scored A–F
A
Microtubules undergo dynamic instability
Mitchison & Kirschner, foundational.
B
Paclitaxel resistance often involves β-tubulin isotype switching
Supported but tumour-context-dependent.
F
Cilia are vestigial in adult humans
Primary cilia are critical signaling hubs (Hedgehog, PDGFR) on most cells.
Quiz
Check your understanding
Q1. Paclitaxel kills cells by:
Q2. Which Rho-family GTPase drives lamellipodial actin protrusion?
Flashcards
Lock it in
1 / 4
Front
Three intermediate-filament diseases and tissues?
Click to flip
Suggested reading
Primary literature
- Microtubule dynamic instability — Mitchison & Kirschner, Nature 1984 ↗
- Mechanotransduction in cell biology — Vogel & Sheetz, Nat Rev Mol Cell Biol 2006 ↗