scholarly journals Unique inducible filamentous motility identified in pathogenic Bacillus cereus group species

2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (12) ◽  
pp. 2997-3010
Author(s):  
Martha M. Liu ◽  
Shannon Coleman ◽  
Lauren Wilkinson ◽  
Maren L. Smith ◽  
Thomas Hoang ◽  
...  

Abstract Active migration across semi-solid surfaces is important for bacterial success by facilitating colonization of unoccupied niches and is often associated with altered virulence and antibiotic resistance profiles. We isolated an atmospheric contaminant, subsequently identified as a new strain of Bacillus mobilis, which showed a unique, robust, rapid, and inducible filamentous surface motility. This flagella-independent migration was characterized by formation of elongated cells at the expanding edge and was induced when cells were inoculated onto lawns of metabolically inactive Campylobacter jejuni cells, autoclaved bacterial biomass, adsorbed milk, and adsorbed blood atop hard agar plates. Phosphatidylcholine (PC), bacterial membrane components, and sterile human fecal extracts were also sufficient to induce filamentous expansion. Screening of eight other Bacillus spp. showed that filamentous motility was conserved amongst B. cereus group species to varying degrees. RNA-Seq of elongated expanding cells collected from adsorbed milk and PC lawns versus control rod-shaped cells revealed dysregulation of genes involved in metabolism and membrane transport, sporulation, quorum sensing, antibiotic synthesis, and virulence (e.g., hblA/B/C/D and plcR). These findings characterize the robustness and ecological significance of filamentous surface motility in B. cereus group species and lay the foundation for understanding the biological role it may play during environment and host colonization.

2008 ◽  
Vol 74 (23) ◽  
pp. 7451-7453 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lorraine McIntyre ◽  
Kathryn Bernard ◽  
Daniel Beniac ◽  
Judith L. Isaac-Renton ◽  
David Craig Naseby

ABSTRACT Food poisoning laboratories identify Bacillus cereus using routine methods that may not differentiate all Bacillus cereus group species. We recharacterized Bacillus food-poisoning strains from 39 outbreaks and identified B. cereus in 23 outbreaks, B. thuringiensis in 4, B. mycoides in 1, and mixed strains of Bacillus in 11 outbreaks.


2016 ◽  
Vol 99 (4) ◽  
pp. 2617-2624 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fernanda Cattani ◽  
Valdir C. Barth ◽  
Jéssica S.R. Nasário ◽  
Carlos A.S. Ferreira ◽  
Sílvia D. Oliveira

eLife ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sheng Min Shih ◽  
Benjamin D Engel ◽  
Fatih Kocabas ◽  
Thomas Bilyard ◽  
Arne Gennerich ◽  
...  

The assembly and maintenance of all cilia and flagella require intraflagellar transport (IFT) along the axoneme. IFT has been implicated in sensory and motile ciliary functions, but the mechanisms of this relationship remain unclear. Here, we used Chlamydomonas flagellar surface motility (FSM) as a model to test whether IFT provides force for gliding of cells across solid surfaces. We show that IFT trains are coupled to flagellar membrane glycoproteins (FMGs) in a Ca2+-dependent manner. IFT trains transiently pause through surface adhesion of their FMG cargos, and dynein-1b motors pull the cell towards the distal tip of the axoneme. Each train is transported by at least four motors, with only one type of motor active at a time. Our results demonstrate the mechanism of Chlamydomonas gliding motility and suggest that IFT plays a major role in adhesion-induced ciliary signaling pathways.


1984 ◽  
Vol 99 (2) ◽  
pp. 655-660 ◽  
Author(s):  
A P Aguas ◽  
P Pinto da Silva

Membrane halves of boar sperm flagella were produced by freeze-fracture and labeled in situ with concanavalin A and wheat germ agglutinin; the lectins were visualized with protein-gold complexes. Concanavalin A and wheat germ agglutinin binding sites partition with both protoplasmic and exoplasmic halves of the membrane. A high density of lectin marking was found on protoplasmic membrane halves; we conclude that the label corresponds to transmembrane glycoproteins that, on freeze-fracture, are dragged across the outer (exoplasmic) half of the phospholipid bilayer. Our demonstration of numerous transmembrane proteins in sperm flagella offers the structural setting for previous models on flagellar surface motility that postulate accessibility of motile membrane components to the submembranous cytoskeleton.


1999 ◽  
Vol 5 (S2) ◽  
pp. 1044-1045
Author(s):  
D.W. Knowles ◽  
N. Mohandas ◽  
C. Ortiz de Solorzano ◽  
S.J. Lockett

The human erythrocyte membrane comprises many different biological macromolecules arranged into a cohesive two dimensional structure. It has long been a model system for studying cell membrane component interactions and their related underlying cell biology. Erythrocyte membrane rigidity emanates from its hexagonal semi-solid cytoskeletal network of spectrin polymers joined at junctional complexes by globular proteins. The network supports a 2D fluid double layer of lipid in which is dissolved a large array of receptor proteins some of which completely span the lipid bilayer and link to the underlying cytoskeletal network.To study membrane component - component interactions, we have used the technique of fluorescence imaged microdeformation (1). This technique combines fluorescence labeling of specific membrane components, single cell microdeformation and state-of-the-art image collection and analysis to map the distribution of labeled components on the surface of the cell.


Author(s):  
Catherine Adley ◽  
Khalil Arshak ◽  
Camila Molnar ◽  
Kamila Oliwa ◽  
Vijayalakshmi Velusamy

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