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Lack of N-Terminal Segment of the Flagellin Protein Results in the Production of a Shortened Polar Flagellum in the Deep-Sea Sedimentary Bacterium Pseudoalteromonas sp. Strain SM9913.


ABSTRACT: Bacterial polar flagella, comprised of flagellin, are essential for bacterial motility. Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain SM9913 is a bacterium isolated from deep-sea sediments. Unlike other Pseudoalteromonas strains that have a long polar flagellum, strain SM9913 has an abnormally short polar flagellum. Here, we investigated the underlying reason for the short flagellum and found that a single-base mutation was responsible for the altered flagellar assembly. This mutation leads to the fragmentation of the flagellin gene into two genes, PSM_A2281, encoding the core segment and the C-terminal segment, and PSM_A2282, encoding the N-terminal segment, and only gene PSM_A2281 is involved in the production of the short polar flagellum. When a chimeric gene of PSM_A2281 and PSM_A2282 encoding an intact flagellin, A2281::82, was expressed, a long polar flagellum was produced, indicating that the N-terminal segment of flagellin contributes to the production of a polar flagellum of a normal length. Analyses of the simulated structures of A2281 and A2281::82 and that of the flagellar filament assembled with A2281::82 indicate that due to the lack of two α-helices, the core of the flagellar filament assembled with A2281 is incomplete and is likely too weak to support the stability and movement of a long flagellum. This mutation in strain SM9913 had little effect on its growth and only a small effect on its swimming motility, implying that strain SM9913 can live well with this mutation in natural sedimentary environments. This study provides a better understanding of the assembly and production of bacterial flagella. IMPORTANCE Polar flagella, which are essential organelles for bacterial motility, are comprised of multiple flagellin subunits. A flagellin molecule contains an N-terminal segment, a core segment, and a C-terminal segment. The results of this investigation of the deep-sea sedimentary bacterium Pseudoalteromonas sp. strain SM9913 demonstrate that a single-base mutation in the flagellin gene leads to the production of an incomplete flagellin without the N-terminal segment and that the loss of the N-terminal segment of the flagellin protein results in the production of a shortened polar flagellar filament. Our results shed light on the important function of the N-terminal segment of flagellin in the assembly and stability of bacterial flagellar filament.

SUBMITTER: Sheng Q 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC8516044 | biostudies-literature | 2021 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Lack of N-Terminal Segment of the Flagellin Protein Results in the Production of a Shortened Polar Flagellum in the Deep-Sea Sedimentary Bacterium <i>Pseudoalteromonas</i> sp. Strain SM9913.

Sheng Qi Q   Liu Si-Min SM   Cheng Jun-Hui JH   Li Chun-Yang CY   Fu Hui-Hui HH   Zhang Xi-Ying XY   Song Xiao-Yan XY   McMinn Andrew A   Zhang Yu-Zhong YZ   Su Hai-Nan HN   Chen Xiu-Lan XL  

Applied and environmental microbiology 20210818 21


Bacterial polar flagella, comprised of flagellin, are essential for bacterial motility. <i>Pseudoalteromonas</i> sp. strain SM9913 is a bacterium isolated from deep-sea sediments. Unlike other <i>Pseudoalteromonas</i> strains that have a long polar flagellum, strain SM9913 has an abnormally short polar flagellum. Here, we investigated the underlying reason for the short flagellum and found that a single-base mutation was responsible for the altered flagellar assembly. This mutation leads to the  ...[more]

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