4.5 Article

The switch complex ArlCDE connects the chemotaxis system and the archaellum

期刊

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY
卷 114, 期 3, 页码 468-479

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mmi.14527

关键词

archaea; archaeal flagellum; archaellum; chemosensory arrays; chemotaxis; motility

资金

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [403222702-SFB 1381, 411069969]
  2. China Scholarship Council

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Cells require a sensory system and a motility structure to achieve directed movement. Bacteria and archaea possess rotating filamentous motility structures that work in concert with the sensory chemotaxis system. This allows microorganisms to move along chemical gradients. The central response regulator protein CheY can bind to the motor of the motility structure, the flagellum in bacteria, and the archaellum in archaea. Both motility structures have a fundamentally different protein composition and structural organization. Yet, both systems receive input from the chemotaxis system. So far, it was unknown how the signal is transferred from the archaeal CheY to the archaellum motor to initiate motor switching. We applied a fluorescent microscopy approach in the model euryarchaeon Haloferax volcanii and shed light on the sequence order in which signals are transferred from the chemotaxis system to the archaellum. Our findings indicate that the euryarchaeal-specific ArlCDE are part of the archaellum motor and that they directly receive input from the chemotaxis system via the adaptor protein CheF. Hence, ArlCDE are an important feature of the archaellum of euryarchaea, are essential for signal transduction during chemotaxis and represent the archaeal switch complex.

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