Insight into structural remodeling of the FlhA ring responsible for bacterial flagellar type III protein export
Author(s) -
Naoya Terahara,
Yumi Inoue,
Noriyuki Kodera,
Yusuke V. Morimoto,
Takayuki Uchihashi,
Katsumi Imada,
Toshio Ando,
Keiichi Namba,
Tohru Minamino
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.aao7054
Subject(s) - flagellum , microbiology and biotechnology , protein filament , ring (chemistry) , hook , biology , genetics , chemistry , gene , structural engineering , engineering , organic chemistry
The bacterial flagellum is a supramolecular motility machine. Flagellar assembly begins with the basal body, followed by the hook and finally the filament. A carboxyl-terminal cytoplasmic domain of FlhA (FlhA) forms a nonameric ring structure in the flagellar type III protein export apparatus and coordinates flagellar protein export with assembly. However, the mechanism of this process remains unknown. We report that a flexible linker of FlhA (FlhA) is required not only for FlhA ring formation but also for substrate specificity switching of the protein export apparatus from the hook protein to the filament protein upon completion of the hook structure. FlhA was required for cooperative ring formation of FlhA. Alanine substitutions of residues involved in FlhA ring formation interfered with the substrate specificity switching, thereby inhibiting filament assembly at the hook tip. These observations lead us to propose a mechanistic model for export switching involving structural remodeling of FlhA.
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