| Literature DB >> 28259628 |
Eun A Kim1, Joseph Panushka1, Trevor Meyer1, Ryan Carlisle1, Samantha Baker1, Nicholas Ide1, Michael Lynch2, Brian R Crane2, David F Blair3.
Abstract
Structural models of the complex that regulates the direction of flagellar rotation assume either ~34 or ~25 copies of the protein FliG. Support for ~34 came from crosslinking experiments identifying an intersubunit contact most consistent with that number; support for ~25 came from the observation that flagella can assemble and rotate when FliG is genetically fused to FliF, for which the accepted number is ~25. Here, we have undertaken crosslinking and other experiments to address more fully the question of FliG number. The results indicate a copy number of ~25 for FliG. An interaction between the C-terminal and middle domains, which has been taken to support a model with ~34 copies, is also supported. To reconcile the interaction with a FliG number of ~25, we hypothesize conformational plasticity in an interdomain segment of FliG that allows some subunits to bridge gaps created by the number mismatch. This proposal is supported by mutant phenotypes and other results indicating that the normally helical segment adopts a more extended conformation in some subunits. The FliG amino-terminal domain is organized in a regular array with dimensions matching a ring in the upper part of the complex. The model predicts that FliG copy number should be tied to that of FliF, whereas FliM copy number can increase or decrease according to the number of FliG subunits that adopt the extended conformation. This has implications for the phenomenon of adaptive switch remodeling, in which the FliM copy number varies to adjust the bias of the switch.Entities:
Keywords: chemotaxis; molecular motors; motility; protein structure; self-assembly
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28259628 PMCID: PMC5494207 DOI: 10.1016/j.jmb.2017.02.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mol Biol ISSN: 0022-2836 Impact factor: 5.469