EMD-17770
Subtomogram average of the Campylobacter jejuni flagellar motor with the basal disk genes, flgPQ, expressed at low level
EMD-17770
Subtomogram averaging25.5 Å

Map released: 30/10/2024
Last modified: 01/01/2025
Sample Organism:
Campylobacter jejuni
Sample: Campylobacter jejuni flagellar motor
Deposition Authors: Cohen EJ
,
Beeby M
Sample: Campylobacter jejuni flagellar motor
Deposition Authors: Cohen EJ


Evolution of a large periplasmic disk in Campylobacterota flagella enables both efficient motility and autoagglutination.
Cohen EJ
,
Drobnic T,
Ribardo DA,
Yoshioka A,
Umrekar T,
Guo X,
Fernandez JJ,
Brock EE
,
Wilson L,
Nakane D
,
Hendrixson DR,
Beeby M
(2024) Dev Cell , 59 , 3306 - 3321.e5




(2024) Dev Cell , 59 , 3306 - 3321.e5
Abstract:
The flagellar motors of Campylobacter jejuni (C. jejuni) and related Campylobacterota (previously epsilonproteobacteria) feature 100-nm-wide periplasmic "basal disks" that have been implicated in scaffolding a wider ring of additional motor proteins to increase torque, but the size of these disks is excessive for a role solely in scaffolding motor proteins. Here, we show that the basal disk is a flange that braces the flagellar motor during disentanglement of its flagellar filament from interactions with the cell body and other filaments. We show that motor output is unaffected when we shrink or displace the basal disk, and suppressor mutations of debilitated motors occur in flagellar-filament or cell-surface glycosylation pathways, thus sidestepping the need for a flange to overcome the interactions between two flagellar filaments and between flagellar filaments and the cell body. Our results identify unanticipated co-dependencies in the evolution of flagellar motor structure and cell-surface properties in the Campylobacterota.
The flagellar motors of Campylobacter jejuni (C. jejuni) and related Campylobacterota (previously epsilonproteobacteria) feature 100-nm-wide periplasmic "basal disks" that have been implicated in scaffolding a wider ring of additional motor proteins to increase torque, but the size of these disks is excessive for a role solely in scaffolding motor proteins. Here, we show that the basal disk is a flange that braces the flagellar motor during disentanglement of its flagellar filament from interactions with the cell body and other filaments. We show that motor output is unaffected when we shrink or displace the basal disk, and suppressor mutations of debilitated motors occur in flagellar-filament or cell-surface glycosylation pathways, thus sidestepping the need for a flange to overcome the interactions between two flagellar filaments and between flagellar filaments and the cell body. Our results identify unanticipated co-dependencies in the evolution of flagellar motor structure and cell-surface properties in the Campylobacterota.