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1.
FliN is a component of the bacterial flagellum that is present at levels of more than 100 copies and forms the bulk of the C ring, a drum-shaped structure at the inner end of the basal body. FliN interacts with FliG and FliM to form the rotor-mounted switch complex that controls clockwise-counterclockwise switching of the motor. In addition to its functions in motor rotation and switching, FliN is thought to have a role in the export of proteins that form the exterior structures of the flagellum (the rod, hook, and filament). Here, we describe the crystal structure of most of the FliN protein of Thermotoga maritima. FliN is a tightly intertwined dimer composed mostly of beta sheet. Several well-conserved hydrophobic residues form a nonpolar patch on the surface of the molecule. A mutation in the hydrophobic patch affected both flagellar assembly and switching, showing that this surface feature is important for FliN function. The association state of FliN in solution was studied by analytical ultracentrifugation, which provided clues to the higher-level organization of the protein. T. maritima FliN is primarily a dimer in solution, and T. maritima FliN and FliM together form a stable FliM(1)-FliN(4) complex. Escherichia coli FliN forms a stable tetramer in solution. The arrangement of FliN subunits in the tetramer was modeled by reference to the crystal structure of tetrameric HrcQB(C), a related protein that functions in virulence factor secretion in Pseudomonas syringae. The modeled tetramer is elongated, with approximate dimensions of 110 by 40 by 35 Angstroms, and it has a large hydrophobic cleft formed from the hydrophobic patches on the dimers. On the basis of the present data and available electron microscopic images, we propose a model for the organization of FliN subunits in the C ring.  相似文献   

2.
Domain Analysis of the FliM Protein of Escherichia coli   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1       下载免费PDF全文
The FliM protein of Escherichia coli is required for the assembly and function of flagella. Genetic analyses and binding studies have shown that FliM interacts with several other flagellar proteins, including FliN, FliG, phosphorylated CheY, other copies of FliM, and possibly MotA and FliF. Here, we examine the effects of a set of linker insertions and partial deletions in FliM on its binding to FliN, FliG, CheY, and phospho-CheY and on its functions in flagellar assembly and rotation. The results suggest that FliM is organized into multiple domains. A C-terminal domain of about 90 residues binds to FliN in coprecipitation experiments, is most stable when coexpressed with FliN, and has some sequence similarity to FliN. This C-terminal domain is joined to the rest of FliM by a segment (residues 237 to 247) that is poorly conserved, tolerates linker insertion, and may be an interdomain linker. Binding to FliG occurs through multiple segments of FliM, some in the C-terminal domain and others in an N-terminal domain of 144 residues. Binding of FliM to CheY and phospho-CheY was complex. In coprecipitation experiments using purified FliM, the protein bound weakly to unphosphorylated CheY and more strongly to phospho-CheY, in agreement with previous reports. By contrast, in experiments using FliM in fresh cell lysates, the protein bound to unphosphorylated CheY about as well as to phospho-CheY. Determinants for binding CheY occur both near the N terminus of FliM, which appears most important for binding to the phosphorylated protein, and in the C-terminal domain, which binds more strongly to unphosphorylated CheY. Several different deletions and linker insertions in FliM enhanced its binding to phospho-CheY in coprecipitation experiments with protein from cell lysates. This suggests that determinants for binding phospho-CheY may be partly masked in the FliM protein as it exists in the cytoplasm. A model is proposed for the arrangement and function of FliM domains in the flagellar motor.  相似文献   

3.
FliN is a component of the flagellar switch complex in many bacterial species. The crystal structure is known for most of FliN, and a targeted cross-linking study (K. Paul and D. F. Blair, J. Bacteriol. 188:2502-2511, 2006) showed that it is organized in ring-shaped tetramers at the bottom of the basal body C ring. FliN is essential for flagellar assembly and direction switching, but its precise functions have not been defined. Here, we identify functionally important regions on FliN by systematic mutagenesis. Nonconservative mutations were made at positions sampling the surface of the protein, and the effects on flagellar assembly and function were measured. Flagellar assembly was disrupted by mutations in a conserved hydrophobic patch centered on the dimer twofold axis or by mutations on the surface that forms the dimer-dimer interface in the tetramer. The assembly defect in hydrophobic-patch mutants was partially rescued by overexpression of the flagellar export proteins FliH and FliI, and coprecipitation assays demonstrated a binding interaction between FliN and FliH that was weakened by mutations in the hydrophobic patch. Thus, FliN might contribute to export by providing binding sites for FliH or FliH-containing complexes. The region around the hydrophobic patch is also important for switching; certain mutations in or near the patch caused a smooth-swimming chemotaxis defect that in most cases could be partially rescued by overexpression of the clockwise-signaling protein CheY. The results indicate that FliN is more closely involved in switching than has been supposed, possibly contributing to the binding site for CheY on the switch.  相似文献   

4.
Bacterial flagella contain a rotor-mounted protein complex termed the switch complex that functions in flagellar assembly, rotation, and clockwise/counterclockwise direction control. In Escherichia coli and Salmonella, the switch complex contains the proteins FliG, FliM, and FliN and corresponds structurally with the C-ring in the flagellar basal body. Certain features of subunit organization in the switch complex have been deduced previously, but details of subunit organization in the lower part of the C-ring and the molecular movements responsible for motor switching remain unclear. In this study, we use cross-linking, binding, and mutational experiments to examine subunit organization in the bottom of the C-ring and to probe movements that occur upon switching. The results show that FliN tetramers alternate with FliM C-terminal domains to form the bottom of the C-ring in an arrangement that closely reproduces the major features observed in electron microscopic reconstructions. When motors were switched to clockwise rotation by a repellent stimulus, cross-link yields were altered in a pattern indicating relative movement of FliN and FliMC. These results are discussed in the framework of a structurally grounded hypothesis for the switching mechanism.  相似文献   

5.
The flagellar switch proteins of Salmonella, FliG, FliM and FliN, participate in the switching of motor rotation, torque generation and flagellar assembly/export. FliN has been implicated in the flagellar export process. To address this possibility, we constructed 10-amino-acid scanning deletions and larger truncations over the C-terminal domain of FliN. Except for the last deletion variant, all other variants were unable to complement a fliN null strain or to restore the export of flagellar proteins. Most of the deletions showed strong negative dominance effects on wild-type cells. FliN was found to associate with FliH, a flagellar export component that regulates the ATPase activity of FliI. The binding of FliM to FliN does not interfere with this FliN-FliH interaction. Furthermore, a five-protein complex consisting of FliG, His-tagged FliM, FliN, FliH and FliI was purified by nickel-affinity chromatography. FliJ, a putative general chaperone, is bound to FliM even in the absence of FliH. The importance of the C ring as a possible docking site for export substrates, chaperones and FliI through FliH for their efficient delivery to membrane components of the export apparatus is discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The flagellar switch of Salmonella typhimurium and Escherichia coli is composed of three proteins, FliG, FliM, and FliN. The switch complex modulates the direction of flagellar motor rotation in response to information about the environment received through the chemotaxis signal transduction pathway. In particular, chemotaxis protein CheY is believed to bind to switch protein FliM, inducing clockwise filament rotation and tumbling. To investigate the function of FliM and its interactions with FliG and FliN, we engineered a series of 34 FliM deletion mutant proteins, each lacking a different 10-amino-acid segment. We have determined the phenotype associated with each mutant protein, the ability of each mutant protein to interfere with the motility of wild-type cells, and the effect of additional FliG and FliN on the function of selected FliM mutant proteins. Overall, deletions at the N terminus produced a counterclockwise switch bias, deletions in the central region of the protein produced poorly motile or nonflagellate cells, and deletions near the C terminus produced only nonflagellate cells. On the basis of this evidence and the results of a previous study of spontaneous FliM mutants (H. Sockett, S. Yamaguchi, M. Kihara, V. M. Irikura, and R. M. Macnab, J. Bacteriol. 174:793-806, 1992), we propose a division of the FliM protein into four functional regions: an N-terminal region primarily involved in switching, an extended N-terminal region involved in switching and assembly, a middle region involved in switching and motor rotation, and a C-terminal region primarily involved in flagellar assembly.  相似文献   

7.
Brown PN  Hill CP  Blair DF 《The EMBO journal》2002,21(13):3225-3234
The FliG protein is essential for assembly, rotation and clockwise/counter-clockwise (CW/CCW) switching of the bacterial flagellum. About 25 copies of FliG are present in a large rotor-mounted assembly termed the 'switch complex', which also contains the proteins FliM and FliN. Mutational studies have identified the segments of FliG most crucial for flagellar assembly, rotation and switching. The structure of the C-terminal domain, which functions specifically in rotation, was reported previously. Here, we describe the crystal structure of a larger fragment of the FliG protein from Thermotoga maritima, which encompasses the middle and C-terminal parts of the protein (termed FliG-MC). The FliG-MC molecule consists of two compact globular domains, linked by an alpha-helix and an extended segment that contains a well-conserved Gly-Gly motif. Mutational studies indicate that FliM binds to both of the globular domains, and given the flexibility of the linking segment, FliM is likely to determine the relative orientation of the domains in the flagellum. We propose a model for the organization of FliG-MC molecules in the flagellum, and suggest that CW/CCW switching might occur by movement of the C-terminal domain relative to other parts of FliG, under the control of FliM.  相似文献   

8.
Rotation and switching of the bacterial flagellum depends on a large rotor-mounted protein assembly composed of the proteins FliG, FliM and FliN, with FliG most directly involved in rotation. The crystal structure of a complex between the central domains of FliG and FliM, in conjunction with several biochemical and molecular-genetic experiments, reveals the arrangement of the FliG and FliM proteins in the rotor. A stoichiometric mismatch between FliG (26 subunits) and FliM (34 subunits) is explained in terms of two distinct positions for FliM: one where it binds the FliG central domain and another where it binds the FliG C-terminal domain. This architecture provides a structural framework for addressing the mechanisms of motor rotation and direction switching and for unifying the large body of data on motor performance. Recently proposed alternative models of rotor assembly, based on a subunit contact observed in crystals, are not supported by experiment.  相似文献   

9.
FliG is a component of the switch complex on the rotor of the bacterial flagellum. Each flagellar motor contains about 25 FliG molecules. The protein of Escherichia coli has 331 amino acid residues and comprises at least two discrete domains. A C-terminal domain of about 100 residues functions in rotation and includes charged residues that interact with the stator protein MotA. Other parts of the FliG protein are essential for flagellar assembly and interact with the MS ring protein FliF and the switch complex protein FliM. The crystal structure of the middle and C-terminal parts of FliG shows two globular domains joined by an alpha-helix and a short extended segment that contains two well-conserved glycine residues. Here, we describe targeted cross-linking studies of FliG that reveal features of its organization in the flagellum. Cys residues were introduced at various positions, singly or in pairs, and cross-linking by a maleimide or disulfide-inducing oxidant was examined. FliG molecules with pairs of Cys residues at certain positions in the middle domain formed disulfide-linked dimers and larger multimers with a high yield, showing that the middle domains of adjacent subunits are in fairly close proximity and putting constraints on the relative orientation of the domains. Certain proteins with single Cys replacements in the C-terminal domain formed dimers with moderate yields but not larger multimers. On the basis of the cross-linking results and the data available from mutational and electron microscopic studies, we propose a model for the organization of FliG subunits in the flagellum.  相似文献   

10.
FliG, FliM, and FliN are three proteins of Salmonella typhimurium that affect the rotation and switching of direction of the flagellar motor. An analysis of mutant alleles of FliM has been described recently (H. Sockett, S. Yamaguchi, M. Kihara, V. M. Irikura, and R. M. Macnab, J. Bacteriol. 174:793-806, 1992). We have now analyzed a large number of mutations in the fliG and fliN genes that are responsible for four different types of defects: failure to assembly flagella (nonflagellate phenotype), failure to rotate flagella (paralyzed phenotype), and failure to display normal chemotaxis as a result of an abnormally high bias to clockwise (CW) or counterclockwise (CCW) rotation (CW-bias and CCW-bias phenotypes, respectively). The null phenotype for fliG, caused by nonsense or frameshift mutations, was nonflagellate. However, a considerable part of the FliG amino acid sequence was not needed for flagellation, with several substantial in-frame deletions preventing motor rotation but not flagellar assembly. Missense mutations in fliG causing paralysis or abnormal switching occurred at a number of positions, almost all within the middle one-third of the gene. CW-bias and CCW-bias mutations tended to segregate into separate subclusters. The null phenotype of fliN is uncertain, since frameshift and nonsense mutations gave in some cases the nonflagellate phenotype and in other cases the paralyzed phenotype; in none of these cases was the phenotype a consequence of polar effects on downstream flagellar genes. Few positions in FliN were found to affect switching: only one gave rise to the CW mutant bias and only four gave rise to the CCW mutant bias. The different properties of the FliM, FliG, and FliN proteins with respect to the processes of assembly, rotation, and switching are discussed.  相似文献   

11.
The switch complex at the base of the bacterial flagellum is essential for flagellar assembly, rotation, and switching. In Escherichia coli and Salmonella, the complex contains about 26 copies of FliG, 34 copies of FliM, and more then 100 copies of FliN, together forming the basal body C ring. FliG is involved most directly in motor rotation and is located in the upper (membrane-proximal) part of the C ring. A crystal structure of the middle and C-terminal parts of FliG shows two globular domains connected by an alpha-helix and a short extended segment. The middle domain of FliG has a conserved surface patch formed by the residues EHPQ(125-128) and R(160) (the EHPQR motif), and the C-terminal domain has a conserved surface hydrophobic patch. To examine the functional importance of these and other surface features of FliG, we made mutations in residues distributed over the protein surface and measured the effects on flagellar assembly and function. Mutations preventing flagellar assembly occurred mainly in the vicinity of the EHPQR motif and the hydrophobic patch. Mutations causing aberrant clockwise or counterclockwise motor bias occurred in these same regions and in the waist between the upper and lower parts of the C-terminal domain. Pull-down assays with glutathione S-transferase-FliM showed that FliG interacts with FliM through both the EHPQR motif and the hydrophobic patch. We propose a model for the organization of FliG and FliM subunits that accounts for the FliG-FliM interactions identified here and for the different copy numbers of FliG and FliM in the flagellum.  相似文献   

12.
H Tang  S Billings  X Wang  L Sharp    D F Blair 《Journal of bacteriology》1995,177(12):3496-3503
The FliN protein of Escherichia coli is essential for the assembly and function of flagella. Here, we report the effects of regulated underexpression and overexpression of FliN in a fliN null strain. Cells that lack the FliN protein do not make flagella. When FliN is underexpressed, cells produce relatively few flagella and those made are defective, rotating at subnormal, rapidly varying speeds. These results are similar to what was seen previously when the flagellar protein FliM was underexpressed and unlike what was seen when the motility proteins MotA and MotB were underexpressed. Overexpression of FliN impairs motility and flagellation, as has been reported previously for FliM, but when FliN and FliM are co-overexpressed, motility is much less impaired. This and additional evidence presented indicate that FliM and FliN are associated in the flagellar motor, in a structure distinct from the MotA/MotB torque generators. A recent study showed that FliN might be involved in the export of flagellar components during assembly (A. P. Vogler, M. Homma, V. M. Irikura, and R. M. Macnab, J. Bacteriol. 173:3564-3572, 1991). We show here that approximately 50 amino acid residues from the amino terminus of FliN are dispensable for function and that the remaining, essential part of FliN has sequence similarity to a part of Spa33, a protein that functions in transmembrane export in Shigella flexneri. Thus, FliN might function primarily in flagellar export, rather than in torque generation, as has sometimes been supposed.  相似文献   

13.
Among the many proteins needed for the assembly and function of bacterial flagella, only five have been suggested to be involved in torque generation. These are MotA, MotB, FliG, FliM and FliN. In this study, we have probed binding interactions among these proteins, by using protein fusions to glutathioneS-transferase or to oligo-histidine, in conjunction with co-isolation assays. The results show that FliG, FliM and FliN all bind to each other, and that each also self-associates. MotA and MotB also bind to each other, and MotA interacts, but only weakly, with FliG and FliM. Taken together with previous genetic, physiological and ultrastructural studies, these results provide strong support for the view that FliG, FliM and FliN function together in a complex on the rotor of the flagellar motor, whereas MotA and MotB form a distinct complex that functions as the stator. Torque generation in the flagellar motor is thus likely to involve interactions between these two protein complexes.  相似文献   

14.
The cytoplasmic portion of the bacterial flagellum is thought to consist of at least two structural components: a switch complex and an export apparatus. These components seem to assemble around the MS ring complex, which is the first flagellar basal body substructure and is located in the cytoplasmic membrane. In order to elucidate the process of assembly of cytoplasmic substructures, the membrane localization of each component of the switch complex (FliG, FliM, and FliN) in various nonflagellated mutants was examined by immunoblotting. It was found that all these switch proteins require the MS ring protein FliF to associate with the cell membrane. FliG does not require FliM and FliN for this association, but FliM and FliN associate cooperatively with the membrane only through FliG. Furthermore, all three switch proteins were detected in membranes isolated from fliE, fliH, fliI, fliJ, fliO, fliP, fliQ, fliR, flhA, flhB, and flgJ mutants, indicating that the switch complex assembles on the MS ring complex without any other flagellar proteins involved in the early stage of flagellar assembly. The relationship between the switch complex and the export apparatus is discussed.  相似文献   

15.
The molecular cascade that controls switching of the direction of rotation of Escherichia coli flagellar motors is well known, but the conformational changes that allow the rotor to switch are still unclear. The signaling molecule CheY, when phosphorylated, binds to the C-ring at the base of the rotor, raising the probability that the motor spins clockwise. When the concentration of CheY-P is so low that the motor rotates exclusively counterclockwise (CCW), the C-ring recruits more monomers of FliM and tetramers of FliN, the proteins to which CheY-P binds, thus increasing the motor's sensitivity to CheY-P and allowing it to switch once again. Motors that rotate exclusively CCW have more FliM and FliN subunits in their C-rings than motors that rotate exclusively clockwise. How are the new subunits accommodated? Does the diameter of the C-ring increase, or do FliM and FliN get packed in a different pattern, keeping the overall diameter of the C-ring constant? Here, by measuring fluorescence anisotropy of yellow fluorescent protein-labeled motors, we show that the CCW C-rings accommodate more FliM monomers without changing the spacing between them, and more FliN monomers at the same time as increasing their effective spacing and/or changing their orientation within the tetrameric structure.  相似文献   

16.
Among the many proteins needed for assembly and function of bacterial flagella, FliG, FliM, and FliN have attracted special attention because mutant phenotypes suggest that they are needed not only for flagellar assembly but also for torque generation and for controlling the direction of motor rotation. A role for these proteins in torque generation is suggested by the existence of mutations in each of them that produce the Mot- (or paralyzed) phenotype, in which flagella are assembled and appear normal but do not rotate. The presumption is that Mot- defects cause paralysis by specifically disrupting functions essential for torque generation, while preserving the features of a protein needed for flagellar assembly. Here, we present evidence that the reported mot mutations in fliM and fliN do not disrupt torque-generating functions specifically but, instead, affect the incorporation of proteins into the flagellum. The fliM and fliN mutants are immotile at normal expression levels but become motile when the mutant proteins and/or other, evidently interacting flagellar proteins are overexpressed. In contrast, many of the reported fliG mot mutations abolish motility at all expression levels, while permitting flagellar assembly, and thus appear to disrupt torque generation specifically. These mutations are clustered in a segment of about 100 residues at the carboxyl terminus of FliG. A slightly larger carboxyl-terminal segment of 126 residues accumulates in the cells when expressed alone and thus probably constitutes a stable, independently folded domain. We suggest that the carboxyl-terminal domain of FliG functions specifically in torque generation, forming the rotor portion of the site of energy transduction in the flagellar motor.  相似文献   

17.
Bzymek KP  Hamaoka BY  Ghosh P 《Biochemistry》2012,51(8):1669-1677
The bacterial flagellar C-ring is composed of two essential proteins, FliM and FliN. The smaller protein, FliN, is similar to the C-terminus of the larger protein, FliM, both being composed of SpoA domains. While bacterial type III secretion (T3S) systems encode many proteins in common with the flagellum, they mostly have a single protein in place of FliM and FliN. This protein resembles FliM at its N-terminus and is as large as FliM but is more like FliN at its C-terminal SpoA domain. We have discovered that a FliN-sized cognate indeed exists in the Yersinia T3S system to accompany the FliM-sized cognate. The FliN-sized cognate, YscQ-C, is the product of an internal translation initiation site within the locus encoding the FliM-sized cognate YscQ. Both intact YscQ and YscQ-C were found to be required for T3S, indicating that the internal translation initiation site, which is conserved in some but not all YscQ orthologs, is crucial for function. The crystal structure of YscQ-C revealed a SpoA domain that forms a highly intertwined, domain-swapped homodimer, similar to those observed in FliN and the YscQ ortholog HrcQ(B). A single YscQ-C homodimer associated reversibly with a single molecule of intact YscQ, indicating conformational differences between the SpoA domains of intact YscQ and YscQ-C. A "snap-back" mechanism suggested by the structure can account for this. The 1:2 YscQ-YscQ-C complex is a close mimic of the 1:4 FliM-FliN complex and the likely building block of the putative Yersinia T3S system C-ring.  相似文献   

18.
The flagellar motor is one type of propulsion device of motile bacteria. The cytoplasmic ring (C-ring) of the motor interacts with the stator to generate torque in clockwise and counterclockwise directions. The C-ring is composed of three proteins, FliM, FliN, and FliG. Together they form the “switch complex” and regulate switching and torque generation. Here we report the crystal structure of the middle domain of FliM in complex with the middle and C-terminal domains of FliG that shows the interaction surface and orientations of the proteins. In the complex, FliG assumes a compact conformation in which the middle and C-terminal domains (FliGMC) collapse and stack together similarly to the recently published structure of a mutant of FliGMC with a clockwise rotational bias. This intramolecular stacking of the domains is distinct from the intermolecular stacking seen in other structures of FliG. We fit the complex structure into the three-dimensional reconstructions of the motor and propose that the cytoplasmic ring is assembled from 34 FliG and FliM molecules in a 1:1 fashion.  相似文献   

19.
In the course of an analysis of the three genes encoding the flagellar motor switch, we isolated a paralyzed mutant whose defect proved to be a 4-bp deletion of the ribosome binding sequence of the fliN switch gene (V. M. Irikura, M. Kihara, S. Yamaguchi, H. Sockett, and R. M. Macnab, J. Bacteriol. 175:802-810,1993). This sequence lies just before the 3' end of the coding sequence of the upstream fliM switch gene, in the same operon. This mutant readily gave rise to pseudorevertants which, though much less motile than the wild type, did exhibit significant swarming. One such pseudorevertant was found to contain a compensating frameshift such that the fliM and fliN genes were placed in frame, coding for an essentially complete FliM-FliN protein fusion. Minicell analysis demonstrated that, as expected, the parental mutant synthesized an essentially full-length FliM protein but no detectable FliN. The pseudorevertant, in contrast, synthesized a protein with the predicted size for the FliM-FliN fusion protein and no detectable FliM or FliN. Immunoblotting of minicells with antibodies against FliM and FliN confirmed the identities of these various proteins. Immunoblotting of book-basal-body complexes from the wild-type strain gave a strong signal for the three switch proteins FliG, FliM, and FliN. Complexes from the FliM-FliN fusion mutant gave a strong signal for FliG but no signal for either FIiM or FliN; a moderately strong signal for the FliM-FliN fusion protein was seen with the anti-FliM antibody, and a weaker signal was seen with the anti-FliN antibody. The cytoplasmic C ring of the structure, which is seen consistently in electron microscopy of wild-type complexes and which is known to contain the FliM and FliN proteins, was much more labile in the FliM-FliN fusion mutant, giving a fragmented and variable appearance or being completely absent. Complementation data indicated that wild-type FliM had a mild dominant negative effect over the fusion protein, that wild-type FliN and the fusion protein work much better than the fusion protein alone, and that wild-type FliM and FliN together have no major positive or negative effect on the function of the fusion protein. We interpret these data to mean that the FliM-FliN fusion protein incorporates into structure but less stably than do the FliM and FliN proteins separately, that wild-type FliM tends to displace the fusion protein, and that wild-type FliN can supplement the FliN domain of the fusion protein without displacing the FliM domain. The data support, but do not prove, a model in which FliM and FliN in the wild-type switch complex are stationary with respect to each other.  相似文献   

20.
Three Salmonella typhimurium flagellar motor proteins, FliG, FliM and FliN, are required for the switching of rotation sense. The proteins have been localized to the cytoplasmic module of the flagellar base. Structures, which were morphologically indistinguishable from the native transmembrane MS-ring and cytoplasmic C-ring basal body modules, formed in Escherichia coli upon plasmid-encoded synthesis of these proteins together with FliF. The structures localized to the cell membrane and contained all three motor proteins, as determined by immuno-electron microscopy. This result supports the deduction, based on earlier biochemical analysis, that the C-ring is composed entirely of these proteins and, therefore, functions as a dedicated motor component. In addition, it demonstrates that the morphologically correct assembly of the C-ring onto the MS-ring proceeds independently of other structural components of these modules.  相似文献   

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