| Literature DB >> 28378043 |
Eric J G Pollitt1, Stephen P Diggle2.
Abstract
The ability of bacteria to move is critical for their survival in diverse environments and multiple ways have evolved to achieve this. Two forms of motility have recently been described for Staphylococcus aureus, an organism previously considered to be non-motile. One form is called spreading, which is a type of sliding motility and the second form involves comet formation, which has many observable characteristics associated with gliding motility. Darting motility has also been observed in Staphylococcus epidermidis. This review describes how motility is defined and how we distinguish between passive and active motility. We discuss the characteristics of the various forms of Staphylococci motility, the molecular mechanisms involved and the potential future research directions.Entities:
Keywords: Gliding; Motility; Quorum sensing; Staphylococcus aureus
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28378043 PMCID: PMC5501909 DOI: 10.1007/s00018-017-2507-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Mol Life Sci ISSN: 1420-682X Impact factor: 9.261
The different types of bacterial motility and distinguishing features
| Type of motility | Example species | Original description in Henrichsen [ | Molecular mechanism | Other associated factors | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Swimming |
| “The micromorphological pattern is unorganised. The cells move individually and at random in the same manner as flagellated bacteria in wet mounts” | Flagella almost universally required and well conserved in bacteria | Chemotaxis is a requirement for swimming and results in the running and tumbling movement | There is one bacterial species that swims without flagella [ |
| Swarming |
| “Swarming is a kind of surface translocation produced through the action of flagella but (it) is different from swimming. The movement is continuous and regularly follows the long axis of the cells, which are predominantly aggregated in bundles during the movement” | Hyperflagellation, cell elongation (both not always present) | Slime production, Surfactant production, Quorum sensing (control of surfactant production) | There is an historic tendency to call other forms of motility swarming (e.g. |
| Twitching |
| “Cells move predominantly singly although smaller moving aggregates occur. The movement appears as intermittent and jerky and do not regularly follow the long axis of the cell” | Type IV pili attachment and retraction are responsible for movement [ | Pili extend and retract to slingshot the bacteria across a surface | Twitching was discovered before type IV pili were identified and it was a long period before retraction was observed[ |
| Gliding |
| “The movement is continuous and regularly follows the long axis of cells which are predominantly aggregated in bundles” | Very diverse: type IV pili, focal adhesion complexes, slime guns, deformation of outer membrane. Move singly, groups, filaments etc [ | Slime production, Track formation, Gliding and Flagella are mutually exclusive. Pattern of movement dependent on species | Has evolved independently repeatedly; there is still debate about the actual mechanisms/regulation used in multiple species. Multiple mechanisms could be used at the same time |
| Sliding |
| “Sliding is a kind of surface translocation produced by the expansive forces in a growing culture in combination with special surface properties. The micromorphological pattern is that of a uniform sheet of closely packed cells | Bacterial growth and the production of surfactants | The surfactants can be either free or incorporated into the surface of the cells | As argued in the paper, the definition should be broader to also cover |
| Darting |
| “Darting is a kind of surface translocation | Growth periodically overcomes the adhesive forces ejecting cells [ | Poorly studied; many basic features are unknown (e.g. it is adhesive or electrostatic factors holding the cells together) | It has only been noted in |
A table outlining the feature as associated with motility both historically and the molecular basis/hypothetical explanations for it
Fig. 1Overview of Staphylococcus motility. a The edge of a locally passively spreading colony; b a passively spreading SH1000 Staphylococcus colony SH1000; c the edge of the surfactant ring that surrounds a motile S. aureus colony (spreading from the top of the image to the bottom); d Δagr mutant of the Newman strain showing no spread from its inoculation site; e Newman strain of S. aureus showing dendrite formation around a central spreading colony; f a “comet”: a slime covered aggregate of cells that precede observable dendrites; g comets etching the media leaving a track behind them
Fig. 2The different forms of Staphylococcus motility. a Spreading motility which is a variant of sliding motility has been observed in both S. aureus and S. epidermidis. (i) On the surface of an agar plate the bacteria grow and produce PSM surfactants when sufficient density is reached. (ii) The surfactant production, water attraction and reduction in surface tension are so great that it can carry the bacteria outwards, the staphylococci also continue to grow. (iii) Finally the growth of bacteria catches up with surfactant production and the bacteria are physically pushed outwards by the colony growth behind, this continues until the colony stops expanding. b Comet formation, which has been shown in S. aureus and is similar to gliding motility. At a certain point, (i) slime covered aggregates of cells form. (ii) These emerge from the central colony and can seed cells behind them leading to pointed dendrite formation. These comets interact tightly with the agar and can leave tracks behind. (iii) Once the comets stop moving, the slime dissipates and the cells grow outwards. c Darting motility which has been demonstrated in S. epidermidis and possibly S. xylosus. (i) Bacteria initially grow at one point. (ii) Eventually growth overcomes the adhesive forces holding the microcolony together, ejecting cells a short distance. (iii) The process repeats as the colony expands
Fig. 3The regulation of the phenol soluble modulins. The PSMs are closely associated with the agr quorum sensing system. The different PSMs are highlighted in the outlined boxes. The agr system controls its own expression through the production of its own signal and receptor. The agr system is initially expressed at a low level. At sufficient concentrations of AIP (usually associated with increased cell density) it interacts with the AgrC, which in turn activates AgrA, the response regulator. This then greatly increases expression of agr (forming a feedback loop) and also induces the expression of agr-dependent products. AgrA can directly upregulate the PSMs whereas most other virulence factors are controlled through the RNAIII internal signal molecule, which also encodes PSM γ (δ-haemolysin)