Opposite and coordinated rotation of amphitrichous flagella governs oriented swimming and reversals in a magnetotactic spirillum

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Abstract

Current knowledge regarding the mechanism that governs flagellar motor rotation in response to environmental stimuli stems mainly from the study of monotrichous and peritrichous bacteria. Little is known about how two polar flagella, one at each cell pole of the so-called amphitrichous bacterium, are coordinated to steer the swimming. Here we fluorescently labeled the flagella of Magnetospirillum magneticum AMB-1 cells and took advantage of the magnetically controllable swimming of this bacterium to investigate flagellar rotation in moving cells. We identified three motility behaviors (runs, tumbles, and reversals) and two characteristic fluorescence patterns likely corresponding to flagella rotating in opposite directions. Each AMB-1 locomotion mode was systematically associated with particular flagellar patterns at the poles which led us to conclude that, while cell runs are allowed by the asymmetrical rotation of flagellar motors, their symmetrical rotation triggers cell tumbling. Our observations point toward a precise coordination of the two flagellar motors which can be temporarily unsynchronized during tumbling.

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Murat, D., Hérisse, M., Espinosa, L., Bossa, A., Alberto, F., & Wu, L. F. (2015). Opposite and coordinated rotation of amphitrichous flagella governs oriented swimming and reversals in a magnetotactic spirillum. Journal of Bacteriology, 197(20), 3275–3282. https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00172-15

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