4.8 Article

Bacterial flagellum as a propeller and as a rudder for efficient chemotaxis

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1011953108

Keywords

bacterial chemotaxis; bacterial swimming pattern

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [BP-0646573]

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We investigate swimming and chemotactic behaviors of the polarly flagellated marine bacteria Vibrio alginolyticus in an aqueous medium. Our observations show that V. alginolyticus execute a cyclic, three-step (forward, reverse, and flick) swimming pattern that is distinctively different from the run-tumble pattern adopted by Escherichia coli. Specifically, the bacterium backtracks its forward swimming path when the motor reverses. However, upon resuming forward swimming, the flagellum flicks and a new swimming direction is selected at random. In a chemically homogeneous medium (no attractant or repellent), the consecutive forward t(f) and backward t(b) swimming times are uncorrelated. Interestingly, although t(f) and t(b) are not distributed in a Poissonian fashion, their difference Delta t = vertical bar t(f) - t(b) vertical bar is. Near a point source of attractant, on the other hand, t(f) and t(b) are found to be strongly correlated, and Delta t obeys a bimodal distribution. These observations indicate that V. alginolyticus exploit the time-reversal symmetry of forward and backward swimming by using the time difference to regulate their chemotactic behavior. By adopting the three-step cycle, cells of V. alginolyticus are able to quickly respond to a chemical gradient as well as to localize near a point source of attractant.

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