Literature DB >> 16420610

Bacterial motility: links to the environment and a driving force for microbial physics.

James G Mitchell1, Kazuhiro Kogure.   

Abstract

Bacterial motility was recognized 300 years ago. Throughout this history, research into motility has led to advances in microbiology and physics. Thirty years ago, this union helped to make run and tumble chemotaxis the paradigm for bacterial movement. This review highlights how this paradigm has expanded and changed, and emphasizes the following points. The absolute magnitude of swimming speed is ecologically important because it helps determine vulnerability to Brownian motion, sensitivity to gradients, the type of receptors used and the cost of moving, with some bacteria moving at 1 mm s(-1). High costs for high speeds are offset by the benefit of resource translocation across submillimetre redox and other environmental gradients. Much of environmental chemotaxis appears adapted to respond to gradients of micrometres, rather than migrations of centimetres. In such gradients, control of ion pumps is particularly important. Motility, at least in the ocean, is highly intermittent and the speed is variable within a run. Subtleties in flagellar physics provide a variety of reorientation mechanisms. Finally, while careful physical analysis has contributed to our current understanding of bacterial movement, tactic bacteria are increasingly widely used as experimental and theoretical model systems in physics.

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16420610     DOI: 10.1111/j.1574-6941.2005.00003.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  FEMS Microbiol Ecol        ISSN: 0168-6496            Impact factor:   4.194


  48 in total

1.  Bacterial tracking of motile algae assisted by algal cell's vorticity field.

Authors:  J T Locsei; T J Pedley
Journal:  Microb Ecol       Date:  2008-12-02       Impact factor: 4.552

Review 2.  Trends and missing parts in the study of movement ecology.

Authors:  Marcel Holyoak; Renato Casagrandi; Ran Nathan; Eloy Revilla; Orr Spiegel
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2008-12-05       Impact factor: 11.205

3.  Transcriptome divergence and the loss of plasticity in Bacillus subtilis after 6,000 generations of evolution under relaxed selection for sporulation.

Authors:  Heather Maughan; C William Birky; Wayne L Nicholson
Journal:  J Bacteriol       Date:  2008-10-24       Impact factor: 3.490

4.  Identification of specific chemoattractants and genetic complementation of a Borrelia burgdorferi chemotaxis mutant: flow cytometry-based capillary tube chemotaxis assay.

Authors:  Richard G Bakker; Chunhao Li; Michael R Miller; Cynthia Cunningham; Nyles W Charon
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2006-12-15       Impact factor: 4.792

5.  Reduced efficiency of magnetotaxis in magnetotactic coccoid bacteria in higher than geomagnetic fields.

Authors:  Yongxin Pan; Wei Lin; Jinhua Li; Wenfang Wu; Lanxiang Tian; Chenglong Deng; Qingsong Liu; Rixiang Zhu; Michael Winklhofer; Nikolai Petersen
Journal:  Biophys J       Date:  2009-08-19       Impact factor: 4.033

6.  Letting go: bacterial genome reduction solves the dilemma of adapting to predation mortality in a substrate-restricted environment.

Authors:  Michael Baumgartner; Stefan Roffler; Thomas Wicker; Jakob Pernthaler
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2017-06-06       Impact factor: 10.302

Review 7.  Ecology and physics of bacterial chemotaxis in the ocean.

Authors:  Roman Stocker; Justin R Seymour
Journal:  Microbiol Mol Biol Rev       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 11.056

8.  Hydration dynamics promote bacterial coexistence on rough surfaces.

Authors:  Gang Wang; Dani Or
Journal:  ISME J       Date:  2012-10-11       Impact factor: 10.302

9.  Swimming behavior of selected species of Archaea.

Authors:  Bastian Herzog; Reinhard Wirth
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2012-01-13       Impact factor: 4.792

10.  Newly isolated but uncultivated magnetotactic bacterium of the phylum Nitrospirae from Beijing, China.

Authors:  Wei Lin; Jinhua Li; Yongxin Pan
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  2011-11-23       Impact factor: 4.792

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