Impact of flagellar filament length on Campylobacter jejuni for colonization and flagellar-dependent phenotypes.

IF 3 3区 生物学 Q3 MICROBIOLOGY
Journal of Bacteriology Pub Date : 2025-09-18 Epub Date: 2025-08-11 DOI:10.1128/jb.00199-25
Alexis A Waller, Deborah A Ribardo, David R Hendrixson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Many bacteria produce flagella to swim and navigate through environments. Depending on the species, flagella are beneficial for other activities such as sensing surfaces to initiate biofilm development, secretion of specific proteins, and interactions with hosts to promote colonization or pathogenesis of disease. The extracellular region of the flagellum consists mostly of the filament, which is required for many flagellar-dependent activities. The length of the filament varies across bacterial flagellates and even stochastically within a clonal population, but it is unknown whether or how altering filament length impacts flagellar function for motility and other activities. We recently discovered a mechanism by which FlaG of Campylobacter jejuni and other polarly flagellated bacteria controls flagellar filament length so that these species produce shorter filaments than their peritrichous counterparts. We exploited a set of isogenic C. jejuni mutants producing significantly longer and shorter flagellar filaments than WT to assess the impact of filament length on activities of C. jejuni necessary for commensal colonization of a natural host. We found that production of shorter flagellar filaments slows swimming velocity and hinders intestinal colonization of chickens. Although production of shorter and longer flagellar filaments differently impacted cellular autoagglutination, only a subtle impact on biofilm formation was observed. We also acquired evidence that FlaG itself may impact biofilm development, suggesting that FlaG may have another function besides controlling flagellar filament length. Overall, our data suggest that shortening flagellar filaments has a greater impact on flagellar-dependent activities of C. jejuni than producing overly elongated filaments.

Importance: Flagella and flagellar motility are important to propel many bacteria through environments, biofilm formation, and infection of respective hosts. Most often, the importance of flagella for a species has been assessed with mutants lacking flagella altogether or only the extracellular filament while retaining the basal body. We addressed whether altering filament length impacts flagellar-dependent activities for host colonization. We exploited isogenic Campylobacter jejuni mutants that synthesize longer and shorter filaments on average relative to WT to find that production of shorter filaments had greater negative impacts on motility, autoagglutination, and commensal colonization compared to bacteria that produce elongated filaments. Our findings suggest that polar flagellates may produce a flagellar filament of minimal length to achieve flagellar functions and preserve fitness.

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鞭毛丝长度对空肠弯曲杆菌定植和鞭毛依赖表型的影响。
许多细菌产生鞭毛来在环境中游泳和导航。根据物种的不同,鞭毛对其他活动有益,如感应表面以启动生物膜的发育,分泌特定蛋白质,以及与宿主相互作用以促进定植或疾病的发病。鞭毛的细胞外区域主要由细丝组成,这是许多鞭毛依赖活动所必需的。在细菌鞭毛中,细丝的长度是不同的,甚至在一个克隆群体中也是随机的,但目前尚不清楚细丝长度的改变是否或如何影响鞭毛的运动功能和其他活动。我们最近发现了空肠弯曲杆菌和其他极鞭毛细菌的FlaG控制鞭毛丝长度的机制,使这些物种产生的鞭毛丝比周围的同类更短。我们利用一组等基因空肠假丝产生比WT更长的和更短的鞭毛丝的突变体来评估纤维长度对空肠假丝在自然寄主中共生定殖所必需的活性的影响。我们发现较短的鞭毛丝的产生减慢了游泳速度,阻碍了鸡的肠道定植。虽然较短和较长的鞭毛细丝对细胞自凝集的影响不同,但对生物膜形成的影响很小。我们还获得了FlaG本身可能影响生物膜发育的证据,这表明除了控制鞭毛丝长度外,FlaG可能还有其他功能。总的来说,我们的数据表明,缩短鞭毛丝比产生过长的鞭毛丝对空肠梭菌的鞭毛依赖活性有更大的影响。重要性:鞭毛和鞭毛的运动对于推动许多细菌通过环境,形成生物膜和感染各自的宿主是重要的。大多数情况下,对一个物种来说,鞭毛的重要性已经被评估为完全没有鞭毛的突变体或只有细胞外细丝而保留基底体。我们研究了改变灯丝长度是否会影响寄主定殖的鞭毛依赖性活动。我们利用等基因空肠弯曲杆菌突变体,相对于WT平均合成更长和更短的纤维,发现与产生长纤维的细菌相比,产生短纤维对移动性、自凝集和共生定植有更大的负面影响。我们的研究结果表明,极性鞭毛虫可能产生最小长度的鞭毛丝,以实现鞭毛功能并保持适宜性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Bacteriology
Journal of Bacteriology 生物-微生物学
CiteScore
6.10
自引率
9.40%
发文量
324
审稿时长
1.3 months
期刊介绍: The Journal of Bacteriology (JB) publishes research articles that probe fundamental processes in bacteria, archaea and their viruses, and the molecular mechanisms by which they interact with each other and with their hosts and their environments.
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