Scientific Reports (Apr 2017)

Variability in bacterial flagella re-growth patterns after breakage

  • Guillaume Paradis,
  • Fabienne F. V. Chevance,
  • Willisa Liou,
  • Thibaud T. Renault,
  • Kelly T. Hughes,
  • Simon Rainville,
  • Marc Erhardt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-01302-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Many bacteria swim through liquids or crawl on surfaces by rotating long appendages called flagella. Flagellar filaments are assembled from thousands of subunits that are exported through a narrow secretion channel and polymerize beneath a capping scaffold at the tip of the growing filament. The assembly of a flagellum uses a significant proportion of the biosynthetic capacities of the cell with each filament constituting ~1% of the total cell protein. Here, we addressed a significant question whether a flagellar filament can form a new cap and resume growth after breakage. Re-growth of broken filaments was visualized using sequential 3-color fluorescent labeling of filaments after mechanical shearing. Differential electron microscopy revealed the formation of new cap structures on broken filaments that re-grew. Flagellar filaments are therefore able to re-grow if broken by mechanical shearing forces, which are expected to occur frequently in nature. In contrast, no re-growth was observed on filaments that had been broken using ultrashort laser pulses, a technique allowing for very local damage to individual filaments. We thus conclude that assembly of a new cap at the tip of a broken filament depends on how the filament was broken.