Gliding motility driven by individual cell-surface movements in a multicellular filamentous bacterium Chloroflexus aggregans

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Abstract

Chloroflexus aggregans is an unbranched multicellular filamentous bacterium having the ability of gliding motility. The filament moves straightforward at a constant rate, ~3 μm sec-1 on solid surface and occasionally reverses the moving direction. In this study, we successfully detected movements of glass beads on the cell-surface along long axis of the filament indicating that the cell-surface movement was the direct force for gliding. Microscopic analyses found that the cell-surface movements were confined to a cell of the filament, and each cell independently moved and reversed the direction. To understand how the cellular movements determine the moving direction of the filament, we proposed a discrete-time stochastic model; sum of the directions of the cellular movements determines the moving direction of the filament only when the filament pauses, and after moving, the filament keeps the same directional movement until all the cells pause and/or move in the opposite direction. Monte Carlo simulation of this model showed that reversal frequency of longer filaments was relatively fixed to be low, but the frequency of shorter filaments varied widely. This simulation result appropriately explained the experimental observations. This study proposed the relevant mechanism adequately describing the motility of the multicellular filament in C. aggregans.

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Fukushima, S. I., Morohoshi, S., Hanada, S., Matsuura, K., & Haruta, S. (2016). Gliding motility driven by individual cell-surface movements in a multicellular filamentous bacterium Chloroflexus aggregans. FEMS Microbiology Letters, 363(8). https://doi.org/10.1093/femsle/fnw056

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