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1.
The FliF ring is the base for self-assembly of the bacterial flagellum and the FliF/FliG ring complex is the core of the rotor of the flagellar motor. We report the structures of these two ring complexes obtained by electron cryomicroscopy and single-particle image analysis at 22A and 25A resolution, respectively. Direct comparison of these structures with the flagellar basal body made by superimposing the density maps on the central section reveals many interesting features, such as how the mechanically stable connection between the ring and the rod is formed, how directly FliF domains are involved in the near axial density of the basal body forming the proximal end of the central channel for a potential gating mechanism, some indication of flexibility in the connection of FliF and FliG, and structural and functional similarities to the head-to-tail connectors of bacteriophages.  相似文献   

2.
The flagellar basal body, a major part of the flagellar motor, consists of a rod and four rings. When the fliF gene of Salmonella typhimurium, which was previously shown to code for the component protein of the M ring, was cloned and overexpressed in Escherichia coli, the FliF subunits formed ring structures in the cytoplasmic membrane. Electron microscopic observation of the purified ring structures revealed that each was composed of two adjacent rings and a short appendage extending from the center of the rings. Antibodies raised against the purified FliF protein decorated both the M and S rings of the intact basal body. We conclude that the FliF protein is the subunit protein of the M ring, and of the S ring and of part of the proximal rod of the flagellar basal body.  相似文献   

3.
Flagellar ejection is tightly coupled to the cell cycle in Caulobacter crescentus. The MS ring protein FliF, which anchors the flagellar structure in the inner membrane, is degraded coincident with flagellar release. Previous work showed that removal of 26 amino acids from the C terminus of FliF prevents degradation of the protein and interferes with flagellar assembly. To understand FliF degradation in more detail, we identified the protease responsible for FliF degradation and performed a high-resolution mutational analysis of the C-terminal degradation signal of FliF. Cell cycle-dependent turnover of FliF requires an intact clpA gene, suggesting that the ClpAP protease is required for removal of the MS ring protein. Deletion analysis of the entire C-terminal cytoplasmic portion of FliF C confirmed that the degradation signal was contained in the last 26 amino acids that were identified previously. However, only deletions longer than 20 amino acids led to a stable FliF protein, while shorter deletions dispersed over the entire 26 amino acids critical for turnover had little effect on stability. This indicated that the nature of the degradation signal is not based on a distinct primary amino acid sequence. The addition of charged amino acids to the C-terminal end abolished cell cycle-dependent FliF degradation, implying that a hydrophobic tail feature is important for the degradation of FliF. Consistent with this, ClpA-dependent degradation was restored when a short stretch of hydrophobic amino acids was added to the C terminus of stable FliF mutant forms.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
The MS ring of the flagellar basal body of Salmonella is an integral membrane structure consisting of about 26 subunits of a 61-kDa protein, FliF. Out of many nonflagellate fliF mutants tested, three gave rise to intergenic suppressors in flagellar region II. The pseudorevertants swarmed, though poorly; this partial recovery of motile function was shown to be due to partial recovery of export function and flagellar assembly. The three parental mutants were all found to carry the same mutation, a six-base deletion corresponding to loss of Ala-174 and Ser-175 in the predicted periplasmic domain of the FliF protein. The 19 intergenic suppressors identified all lay in flhA, and they consisted of 10 independent examples at the nucleotide level or 9 at the amino acid level. Since two of the nine corresponded to different substitutions at the same amino acid position, only eight positions in the FlhA protein have given rise to suppressors. Thus, FliF-FlhA intergenic suppression is a fairly rare event. FlhA is a component of the flagellar protein export apparatus, with an integral membrane domain encompassing the N-terminal half of the sequence and a cytoplasmic C-terminal domain. All of the suppressing mutations lay within the integral membrane domain. These mutations, when placed in a wild-type fliF background, had no mutant phenotype. In the fliF mutant background, mutant FlhA was dominant, yielding a pseudorevertant phenotype. Wild-type FlhA did not exert significant negative dominance in the pseudorevertant background, indicating that it does not compete effectively with mutant FlhA for interaction with mutant FliF. Mutant FliF was partially dominant over wild-type FliF in both the wild-type and second-site FlhA backgrounds. Membrane fractionation experiments indicated that the fliF mutation, though preventing export, was mild enough to permit assembly of the MS ring itself, and also assembly of the cytoplasmic C ring onto the MS ring. The data from this study provide genetic support for a model in which at least the FlhA component of the export apparatus physically interacts with the MS ring within which it is housed.  相似文献   

6.
The bacterial flagellar export apparatus is required for the construction of the bacterial flagella beyond the cytoplasmic membrane. The membrane‐embedded part of the export apparatus, which consists of FlhA, FlhB, FliO, FliP, FliQ and FliR, is located in the central pore of the MS ring formed by 26 copies of FliF. The C‐terminal cytoplasmic domain of FlhA is located in the centre of the cavity within the C ring made of FliG, FliM and FliN. FlhA interacts with FliF, but its assembly mechanism remains unclear. Here, we fused yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) and cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) to the C‐termini of FliF and FlhA and investigated their subcellular localization by fluorescence microscopy. The punctate pattern of FliF–YFP localization required FliG but neither FliM, FliN, FlhA, FlhB, FliO, FliP, FliQ nor FliR. In contrast, FlhA–CFP localization required FliF, FliG, FliO, FliP, FliQ and FliR. The number of FlhA–YFP molecules associated with the MS ring was estimated to be about nine. We suggest that FlhA assembles into the export gate along with other membrane components during the MS ring complex formation in a co‐ordinated manner.  相似文献   

7.
The stoichiometries of components within the flagellar hook-(basal-body) complex of Salmonella typhimurium have been determined. The hook protein (FlgE), the most abundant protein in the complex, is present at approximately 130 subunits. Hook-associated protein 1 (FlgK) is present at approximately 12 subunits. The distal rod protein (FlgG) is present at approximately 26 subunits, while the proximal rod proteins (FlgB, FlgC and FlgF) are present at only approximately six subunits each. The stoichiometries of the proximal rod proteins and hook-associated protein 1 are, within experimental error, consistent with values of 5 or 6, and 11, respectively. Such values would correspond to either one or two turns of a helical structure with a basic helix of approximately 5.5 subunits per turn, which is the geometry of both the hook and the filament and, one supposes, the rod and hook-associated proteins. These stoichiometries may derive from rules for the heterologous interactions that occur when a helical structure consists of successive segments constructed from different proteins; the stoichiometries within the hook and the distal portion of the rod must, however, be set by different mechanisms. The stoichiometries for the ring proteins are approximately 26 subunits each for the M-ring protein (FliF), the P-ring protein (FlgI), and the L-ring protein (FlgH); the protein responsible for the S-ring feature is not known. The rings presumably have rotational rather than helical symmetry, in which case the stoichiometries would be directly constrained by the intersubunit bonding angle. The ring stoichiometries are discussed in light of other information concerning flagellar structure and function.  相似文献   

8.
Twenty-six FliF monomers assemble into the MS ring, a central motor component of the bacterial flagellum that anchors the structure in the inner membrane. Approximately 100 amino acids at the C terminus of FliF are exposed to the cytoplasm and, through the interaction with the FliG switch protein, a component of the flagellar C ring, are essential for the assembly of the motor. In this study, we have dissected the entire cytoplasmic C terminus of the Caulobacter crescentus FliF protein by high-resolution mutational analysis and studied the mutant forms with regard to the assembly, checkpoint control, and function of the flagellum. Only nine amino acids at the very C terminus of FliF are essential for flagellar assembly. Deletion or substitution of about 10 amino acids preceding the very C terminus of FliF resulted in assembly-competent but nonfunctional flagella, making these the first fliF mutations described so far with a Fla(+) but Mot(-) phenotype. Removal of about 20 amino acids further upstream resulted in functional flagella, but cells carrying these mutations were not able to spread efficiently on semisolid agar plates. At least 61 amino acids located between the functionally relevant C terminus and the second membrane-spanning domain of FliF were not required for flagellar assembly and performance. A strict correlation was found between the ability of FliF mutant versions to assemble into a flagellum, flagellar class III gene expression, and a block in cell division. Motile suppressors could be isolated for nonmotile mutants but not for mutants lacking a flagellum. Several of these suppressor mutations were localized to the 5' region of the fliG gene. These results provide genetic support for a model in which only a short stretch of amino acids at the immediate C terminus of FliF is required for flagellar assembly through stable interaction with the FliG switch protein.  相似文献   

9.
Most flagellar proteins are exported via a type III export apparatus which, in part, consists of the membrane proteins FlhA, FlhB, FliO, FliP, FliQ, and FliR and is housed within the membrane-supramembrane ring formed by FliF subunits. Salmonella FlhA is a 692-residue integral membrane protein with eight predicted transmembrane spans. Its function is not understood, but it is necessary for flagellar export. We have created mutants in which potentially important sequences were deleted. FlhA lacking the amino-terminal sequence prior to the first transmembrane span failed to complement and was dominant negative, suggesting that the sequence is required for function. Similar effects were seen in a variant lacking a highly conserved domain (FHIPEP) within a putative cytoplasmic loop. Scanning deletion analysis of the cytoplasmic domain (FlhAc) demonstrated that substantially all of FlhAc is required for efficient function. Affinity blotting showed that FlhA interacts with several other export apparatus membrane proteins. The implications of these findings are discussed, and a model of FlhA within the export apparatus is presented.  相似文献   

10.
Most of the structural components of the flagellum of Salmonella typhimurium are exported through a flagellum-specific pathway, which is a member of the family of type III secretory pathways. The export apparatus for this process is poorly understood. A previous study has shown that two proteins, about 23 and 26 kDa in size and of unknown genetic origin, are incorporated into the flagellar basal body at a very early stage of flagellar assembly. In the present study, we demonstrate that these basal body proteins are FliP (in its mature form after signal peptide cleavage) and FliR respectively. Both of these proteins have homologues in other type III secretion systems. By placing a FLAG epitope tag on FliR and the MS-ring protein FliF and immunoblotting isolated hook basal body complexes with anti-FLAG monoclonal antibody, we estimate (using the FLAG-tagged FliF as an internal reference) that the stoichiometry of FliR is fewer than three copies per basal body. An independent estimate of stoichiometry was made using data from an earlier quantitative radiolabelling analysis, yielding values of around four or five subunits per basal body for FliP and around one subunit per basal body for FliR. Immunoelectron microscopy using anti-FLAG antibody and gold–protein A suggests that FliR is located near the MS ring. We propose that the flagellar export apparatus contains FliP and FliR and that this apparatus is embedded in a patch of membrane in the central pore of the MS ring.  相似文献   

11.
TheSalmonella typhimuriumFliN protein has been proposed to form a mutually interacting complex with FliG and FliM, the switch complex, that is required for flagellar morphogenesis and function. We have used affinity chromatography for purification of extended flagellar basal bodies sufficient for quantitative analysis of their protein composition. The belled, extended structure is predominantly comprised of the switch complex proteins; with FliN present in the most copies (111±13). This explains why single, missensefliN,fliGorfliMmutations, found in many non-motile strains, can alter the belled morphology. Cell lysates from these strains contained the wild-type complement of FliG, FliM and FliN; but the basal bodies lacked the outer, cytoplasmic(C)-ring of the bell and were separated by sedimentation from FliM and FliN. The amount of FliG present in basal bodies from wild-type and one such mutant, FliN100LP, was comparable. These data show that: (1) the mutations define a FliG and FliMFliN multiple contact interface important for motility. (2) FliG is responsible for the increased size of the membrane-embedded MS-ring complex of belled relative to acid-treated basal bodies. (3) FliN, together with FliM, account for most of the C-ring. As a major component of the C-ring, FliN is distinct from the other proteins implicated in axial flagellar protein export. Inner, cytoplasmic rod basal substructure, seen by negative-stain and quick- freeze replica electron microscopy, may gate such export. Lack of connectivity between the cytoplasmic rod and ring substructures places contacts between FliG and FliMFliN at the periphery of the basal body, proximal to the flagellar intramembrane ring particles. This topology is consistent with models where torque results from interaction of circumferential arrays of the switch complex proteins with the ring particles.  相似文献   

12.
Levenson R  Zhou H  Dahlquist FW 《Biochemistry》2012,51(25):5052-5060
The binding of the soluble cytoplasmic protein FliG to the transmembrane protein FliF is one of the first interactions in the assembly of the bacterial flagellum. Once established, this interaction is integral in keeping the flagellar cytoplasmic ring, responsible for both transmission of torque and control of the rotational direction of the flagellum, anchored to the central transmembrane ring on which the flagellum is assembled. Here we isolate and characterize the interaction between the N-terminal domain of Thermotoga maritima FliG (FliG(N)) and peptides corresponding to the conserved C-terminal portion of T. maritima FliF. Using nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and other techniques, we show that the last ~40 amino acids of FliF (FliF(C)) interact strongly (upper bound K(d) in the low nanomolar range) with FliG(N). The formation of this complex causes extensive conformational changes in FliG(N). We find that T. maritima FliG(N) is homodimeric in the absence of the FliF(C) peptide but forms a heterodimeric complex with the peptide, and we show that this same change in oligomeric state occurs in full-length T. maritima FliG, as well. We relate previously observed phenotypic effects of FliF(C) mutations to our direct observation of binding. Lastly, on the basis of NMR data, we propose that the primary interaction site for FliF(C) is located on a conserved hydrophobic patch centered along helix 1 of FliG(N). These results provide new detailed information about the bacterial flagellar motor and support efforts to understand the cytoplasmic ring's precise molecular structure and mechanism of rotational switching.  相似文献   

13.
Morphological pathway of flagellar assembly in Salmonella typhimurium.   总被引:14,自引:0,他引:14  
The process of flagellar assembly was investigated in Salmonella typhimurium. Seven types of flagellar precursors produced by various flagellar mutants were purified by CsCl density gradient protocol. They were characterized morphologically by electron microscopy, and biochemically by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis. The MS ring is formed in the absence of any other flagellar components, including the switch complex and the putative export apparatus. Four proteins previously identified as rod components, FlgB, FlgC, FlgF, FlgG, and another protein, FliE, assemble co-operatively into a stable structure. The hook is formed in two distinct steps; formation of its proximal part and elongation. Proximal part formation occurs, but elongation does not occur, in the absence of the LP ring. FlgD is necessary for hook formation, but not for LP-ring formation. A revised pathway of flagellar assembly is proposed based on these and other results.  相似文献   

14.
The C-terminal half of the Salmonella flagellar protein FlgJ has peptidoglycan hydrolyzing activity and it has been suggested that it is a flagellum-specific muramidase which locally digests the peptidoglycan layer to permit assembly of the rod structure to proceed through the periplasmic space. It was also suggested that FlgJ might be involved in rod formation itself, although there was no direct evidence for this. We purified basal body structures from SJW1437(flgJ) transformed with plasmids encoding various mutant FlgJ proteins and found that these basal bodies possessed the periplasmic P ring but lacked the outer membrane L ring; they also lacked a hook at their distal end. All of these mutant FlgJ proteins had an altered or missing C-terminal domain but had at least the first 151 amino acid residues of the N-terminal domain. Immunoblotting analysis of fractionated cell extracts revealed that a rod/hook export class protein, FlgD, was exported to the periplasm but not to the culture supernatant in these mutants. FlgJ was shown to physically interact with several proteins, and especially FliE and FlgB, which are believed to reside at the cell-proximal end of the rod. On the basis of these results, we conclude that the N-terminal 151 amino acid residues of FlgJ are directly involved in rod formation and that the muramidase activity of FlgJ, though needed for formation of the L ring and subsequent events such as hook formation, is not essential for rod or P ring formation. In contrast, muramidase activity alone does not support rod assembly.  相似文献   

15.
The process of flagellar assembly in Salmonella typhimurium was investigated by using temperature-sensitive mutants. The mutants were grown at the restrictive temperature and then at the permissive temperature, with radiolabel supplied in the first phase of the experiment and not the second, or vice versa. Flagellar hook-basal body complexes were then purified and analyzed by gel electrophoresis and autoradiography. The extent to which a given protein was labeled in the two phases of the experiment provided information as to whether it preceded or followed the block caused by the mutant protein. We conclude the following concerning flagellar assembly. The M-ring protein (FliF) is stably incorporated in the earliest stage detected, along with two previously unknown proteins, with apparent molecular masses of 23 and 26 kilodaltons, respectively, and possibly one of the switch components, FliG. Independent of that event and all other events, the P-ring and L-ring proteins (FlgI and FlgH) are synthesized and exported to the periplasm and outer membrane by the primary cellular export pathway. Rod assembly occurs by export (via the flagellum-specific pathway) of subunits of four proteins, FlgB, FlgC, FlgF, and FlgG, and their incorporation, probably in that order, into the rod structure; this stage requires the flhA and fliI genes, perhaps because they encode part of the export apparatus. Once rod assembly is complete, the FlgI and FlgH proteins assemble around the rod to form the P and L rings. The rod structure, which is only metastable while it is being constructed, becomes stable upon P-ring addition. Export (via the flagellum-specific pathway) and assembly of hook protein, hook-associated proteins, and filament protein then occur successively. A number of flagellar proteins, whose genetic origin and structural role are not yet known, were identified on the basis of their dependence on the flagellar master operon for expression.  相似文献   

16.
K Oosawa  T Ueno    S Aizawa 《Journal of bacteriology》1994,176(12):3683-3691
The flagellar switch proteins (FliG, FliM, and FliN) of Salmonella typhimurium were overproduced in Escherichia coli and partially purified in soluble form. They were mixed with purified MS ring complexes (which consist of subunits of FliF protein) to examine their interactions in vitro. The degree of interaction was estimated by ultracentrifugation, followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. From the band density on the gel, we estimated that FliG bound to the MS ring complex at an approximately 1:1 molar ratio (FliG:FliF), whereas FliM did so only at a 1:5 molar ratio (FliM:FliF). FliN did not bind to the MS ring complex by itself or in the presence of the other switch proteins. A possible configuration of the switch proteins is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Until now, identification of components of the flagellar protein export apparatus has been indirect. We have now identified these components directly by establishing whether mutants defective in putative export components could translocate export substrates across the cytoplasmic membrane into the periplasmic space. Hook-type proteins could be exported to the periplasm of rod mutants, indicating that rod protein export does not have to precede hook-type protein export and therefore that both types of proteins belong to a single export class, the rod/hook-type class, which is distinct from the filament-type class. Hook-capping protein (FlgD) and hook protein (FlgE) required FlhA, FlhB, FliH, FliI, FliO, FliP, FliQ, and FliR for their export to the periplasm. In the case of flagellin as an export substrate, because of the phenomenon of hook-to-filament switching of export specificity, it was necessary to use temperature-sensitive mutants and establish whether flagellin could be exported to the cell exterior following a shift from the permissive to the restrictive temperature. Again, FlhA, FlhB, FliH, FliI, and FliO were required for its export. No suitable temperature-sensitive fliQ or fliR mutants were available. FliP appeared not to be required for flagellin export, but we suspect that the temperature-sensitive FliP protein continued to function at the restrictive temperature if incorporated at the permissive temperature. Thus, we conclude that these eight proteins are general components of the flagellar export pathway. FliJ was necessary for export of hook-type proteins (FlgD and FlgE); we were unable to test whether FliJ is needed for export of filament-type proteins. We suspect that FliJ may be a cytoplasmic chaperone for the hook-type proteins and possibly also for FliE and the rod proteins. FlgJ was not required for the export of the hook-type proteins; again, because of lack of a suitable temperature-sensitive mutant, we were unable to test whether it was required for export of filament-type proteins. Finally, it was established that there is an interaction between the processes of outer ring assembly and of penetration of the outer membrane by the rod and nascent hook, the latter process being of course necessary for passage of export substrates into the external medium. During the brief transition stage from completion of rod assembly and initiation of hook assembly, the L ring and perhaps the capping protein FlgD can be regarded as bona fide export components, with the L ring being in a formal sense the equivalent of the outer membrane secretin structure of type III virulence factor export systems.  相似文献   

18.
U Jenal  L Shapiro 《The EMBO journal》1996,15(10):2393-2406
Flagellar biogenesis and release are developmental events tightly coupled to the cell cycle of Caulobacter crescentus. A single flagellum is assembled at the swarmer pole of the predivisional cell and is released later in the cell cycle. Here we show that the MS-ring monomer FliF, a central motor component that anchors the flagellum in the cell membrane, is synthesized only in the predivisional cell and is integrated into the membrane at the incipient swarmer cell pole, where it initiates flagellar assembly. FliF is proteolytically turned over during swarmer-to-stalked cell differentiation, coinciding with the loss of the flagellum, suggesting that its degradation is coupled to flagellar release. The membrane topology of FliF was determined and a region of the cytoplasmic C-terminal domain was shown to be required for the interaction with a component of the motor switch. The very C-terminal end of FliF contains a turnover determinant, required for the cell cycle-dependent degradation of the MS-ring. The cell cycle-dependent proteolysis of FliF and the targeting of FliF to the swarmer pole together contribute to the asymmetric localization of the MS-ring in the predivisional cell.  相似文献   

19.
The flagellar motor/switch complex, consisting of the three proteins FliG, FliM, and FliN, plays a central role in bacterial motility and chemotaxis. We have analyzed FliG, using 10-amino-acid deletions throughout the protein and testing the deletion clones for their motility and dominance properties and for interaction of the deletion proteins with the MS ring protein FliF. Only the N-terminal 46 amino acids of FliG (segments 1 to 4) were important for binding to FliF; consistent with this, an N-terminal fragment consisting of residues 1 to 108 bound FliF strongly, whereas a C-terminal fragment consisting of residues 109 to 331 did not bind FliF at all. Deletions in the region from residues 37 to 96 (segments 4 to 9), 297 to 306 (segment 30), and 317 to 326 (segment 32) permitted swarming, though not at wild-type levels; all other deletions caused paralyzed or, more commonly, nonflagellate phenotype. Except for those near the N terminus, deletions had a dominant negative effect on wild-type cells.  相似文献   

20.
Rotation of the polar flagellum of Vibrio alginolyticus is driven by a Na+-type flagellar motor. FliG, one of the essential rotor proteins located at the upper rim of the C ring, binds to the membrane-embedded MS ring. The MS ring is composed of a single membrane protein, FliF, and serves as a foundation for flagellar assembly. Unexpectedly, about half of the Vibrio FliF protein produced at high levels in Escherichia coli was found in the soluble fraction. Soluble FliF purifies as an oligomer of ∼700 kDa, as judged by analytical size exclusion chromatography. By using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy, an interaction between a soluble FliF multimer and FliG was detected. This binding was weakened by a series of deletions at the C-terminal end of FliF and was nearly eliminated by a 24-residue deletion or a point mutation at a highly conserved tryptophan residue (W575). Mutations in FliF that caused a defect in FliF-FliG binding abolish flagellation and therefore confer a nonmotile phenotype. As data from in vitro binding assays using the soluble FliF multimer correlate with data from in vivo functional analyses, we conclude that the C-terminal region of the soluble form of FliF retains the ability to bind FliG. Our study confirms that the C-terminal tail of FliF provides the binding site for FliG and is thus required for flagellation in Vibrio, as reported for other species. This is the first report of detection of the FliF-FliG interaction in the Na+-driven flagellar motor, both in vivo and in vitro.  相似文献   

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