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The structural complexity of the Gammaproteobacteria flagellar motor is related to the type of its torque-generating stators

Authors :
Catherine M. Oikonomou
Mohammed Kaplan
Grant J. Jensen
Poorna Subramanian
Andreas Kjaer
Mohamed Y. El-Naggar
Davi R. Ortega
Sahand Pirbadian
Debnath Ghosal
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2018.

Abstract

The bacterial flagellar motor is a cell-envelope-embedded macromolecular machine that functions as a propeller to move the cell. Rather than being an invariant machine, the flagellar motor exhibits significant variability between species, allowing bacteria to adapt to, and thrive in, a wide range of environments. For instance, different torque-generating stator modules allow motors to operate in conditions with different pH and sodium concentrations and some motors are adapted to drive motility in high-viscosity environments. How such diversity evolved is unknown. Here we use electron cryo-tomography to determine thein situmacromolecular structures of the flagellar motors of three Gammaproteobacteria species:Legionella pneumophila,Pseudomonas aeruginosa, andShewanella oneidensisMR-1, providing the first views of intact motors with dual stator systems. Complementing our imaging with bioinformatics analysis, we find a correlation between the stator system of the motor and its structural complexity. Motors with a single H+-driven stator system have only the core P- and L-rings in their periplasm; those with dual H+-driven stator systems have an extra component elaborating their P-ring; and motors with Na+- (or dual Na+-H+)- driven stator systems have additional rings surrounding both their P- and L-rings. Our results suggest an evolution of structural complexity that may have enabled pathogenic bacteria likeL. pneumophilaandP. aeruginosato colonize higher-viscosity environments in animal hosts.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....60833bdbff2bf4d6acc0d303b44a672c