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Correlation between Supercoiling and Conformational Motions of the Bacterial Flagellar Filament
Authors:Andreas M Stadler  Tobias Unruh  Keiichi Namba  Fadel Samatey  Giuseppe Zaccai
Affiliation: Jülich Centre for Neutron Science JCNS (JCNS-1) and Institute for Complex Systems (ICS-1), Forschungszentrum Jülich, Jülich, Germany; Technische Universität München, Physik Department E13 and Forschungs-Neutronenquelle Heinz Maier-Leibnitz (FRM II), Garching bei München, and Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg, Lehrstuhl für Kristallographie und Strukturphysik, Erlangen, Germany;§ Graduate School of Frontier Biosciences, Osaka University, Suita, Osaka, Japan; Trans-Membrane Trafficking Unit, Okinawa, Institute of Science and Technology, Onna, Kunigami, Okinawa, Japan;|| Institut Laue-Langevin and Institut de Biologie Structurale (CEA-CNRS-UJF), Grenoble, France
Abstract:The bacterial flagellar filament is a very large macromolecular assembly of a single protein, flagellin. Various supercoiled states of the filament exist, which are formed by two structurally different conformations of flagellin in different ratios. We investigated the correlation between supercoiling of the protofilaments and molecular dynamics in the flagellar filament using quasielastic and elastic incoherent neutron scattering on the picosecond and nanosecond timescales. Thermal fluctuations in the straight L- and R-type filaments were measured and compared to the resting state of the wild-type filament. Amplitudes of motion on the picosecond timescale were found to be similar in the different conformational states. Mean-square displacements and protein resilience on the 0.1 ns timescale demonstrate that the L-type state is more flexible and less resilient than the R-type, whereas the wild-type state lies in between. Our results provide strong support that supercoiling of the protofilaments in the flagellar filament is determined by the strength of molecular forces in and between the flagellin subunits.
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