Back to Search
Start Over
Nucleator-dependent intercellular assembly of adhesive curli organelles in Escherichia coli
- Publication Year :
- 1996
-
Abstract
- Bacterial adhesion to other bacteria, to eukaryotic cells, and to extracellular matrix proteins is frequently mediated by cell surface-associated polymers (fimbriae) consisting of one or more subunit proteins. We have found that polymerization of curlin to fimbriae-like structures (curli) on the surface of Escherichia coli markedly differs from the prevailing model for fimbrial assembly in that it occurs extracellularly through a self-assembly process depending on a specific nucleator protein. The cell surface-bound nucleator primes the polymerization of curlin secreted by the nucleator-presenting cell or by adjacent cells. The addition of monomers to the growing filament seems to be driven by mass action and guided only by the diffusion gradient between the source of secreted monomer and the surface of monomer condensation.
- Subjects :
- Protein subunit
Fimbria
Molecular Sequence Data
Biology
medicine.disease_cause
Bacterial Adhesion
chemistry.chemical_compound
Biopolymers
Bacterial Proteins
Organelle
medicine
Curli assembly
Escherichia coli
Amino Acid Sequence
DNA Primers
Cell Nucleus
Organelles
Multidisciplinary
Base Sequence
Escherichia coli Proteins
Genetic Complementation Test
Adhesion
Microscopy, Electron
Monomer
Biochemistry
chemistry
Polymerization
Biophysics
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....877158c1bc036fec98ce6ebb3768e5c6