eLife (Jan 2019)

The presence and absence of periplasmic rings in bacterial flagellar motors correlates with stator type

  • Mohammed Kaplan,
  • Debnath Ghosal,
  • Poorna Subramanian,
  • Catherine M Oikonomou,
  • Andreas Kjaer,
  • Sahand Pirbadian,
  • Davi R Ortega,
  • Ariane Briegel,
  • Mohamed Y El-Naggar,
  • Grant J Jensen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.43487
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

The bacterial flagellar motor, a cell-envelope-embedded macromolecular machine that functions as a cellular propeller, exhibits significant structural variability between species. Different torque-generating stator modules allow motors to operate in different pH, salt or viscosity levels. How such diversity evolved is unknown. Here, we use electron cryo-tomography to determine the in situ macromolecular structures of three Gammaproteobacteria motors: Legionella pneumophila, Pseudomonas aeruginosa, and Shewanella oneidensis, providing the first views of intact motors with dual stator systems. Complementing our imaging with bioinformatics analysis, we find a correlation between the motor’s stator system and its structural elaboration. Motors with a single H+-driven stator have only the core periplasmic P- and L-rings; those with dual H+-driven stators have an elaborated P-ring; and motors with Na+ or Na+/H+-driven stators have both their P- and L-rings embellished. Our results suggest an evolution of structural elaboration that may have enabled pathogenic bacteria to colonize higher-viscosity environments in animal hosts.

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