Mastigoneme
Mastigonemes are lateral "hairs" that attach to protistan flagella. Flimsy hairs attach to the flagella of euglenid flagellates, while stiff hairs occur in stramenopile and cryptophyte protists. Stramenopile hairs are approximately 15 nm in diameter, and usually consist of flexible basal part that inserts into the cell membrane, a tubular shaft that itself terminates in smaller "hairs". They reverse the thrust caused when a flagellum beats. The consequence is that the cell is drawn into the water and particles of food are drawn to the surface of heterotrophic species.
Typology of flagella with hairs:
- whiplash flagella : without hairs but may have extensions, e.g., in Opisthokonta
- hairy flagella : with hairs, divided in:
- *with fine hairs : occurs in Euglenophyceae, Dinoflagellata, some Haptophyceae
- *with stiff hairs, divided in:
- **bipartite hairs: with two regions. Occurs in Cryptophyceae, Prasinophyceae, and some Heterokonta
- **tripartite hairs: with three regions. Occurs in most Heterokonta/Stramenopiles