3.3.2: Flagella
-
- Last updated
- Save as PDF
Describe the basic structure of a bacterial flagellum and state its function.
State what provides the energy for bacterial flagellar rotation.
Define the following flagellar arrangements:
-
monotrichous
-
lophotrichous
-
amphitrichous
-
peritrichous
-
axial filaments
Define taxis.
Compare and contrast how bacteria with peritrichous flagella and bacteria with polar flagella carry out taxis.
State how bacterial flagella may play a role in the initiation of innate immune defenses.
Briefly describe how bacterial flagella and chemotaxis may play a role in the pathogenocity of some bacteri
Highlighted Bacterium
-
Read the description of
Treponema pallidum
and match the bacterium with the description of the organism and the infection it causes.
- monotrichous
- lophotrichous
- amphitrichous
- peritrichous
- axial filaments
Why might having flagella better enable those bacteria to cause disease?
Our defense cells have a surface PRR called TLR-5 that recognizes bacterial flagellin. In terms of preventing infection, why is this an advantage?
Most pathogenic spirochetes such as Treponema pallidum and Borrelia burgdorferi disseminate from the original infection site. How are they able to do this?
Structure and Composition of Flagella
- The filament is the rigid, helical structure that extends from the cell surface. It is composed of the protein flagellin arranged in helical chains so as to form a hollow core. During synthesis of the flagellar filament, flagellin molecules coming off of the ribosomes are transported through the hollow core of the filament where they attach to the growing tip of the filament causing it to lengthen. With the exception of a few bacteria, such as Bdellovibrio and Vibrio cholerae , the flagellar filament is not surrounded by a sheath (see Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)) .
- The hook is a flexible coupling between the filament and the basal body (see Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)) .
- The basal body consists of a rod and a series of rings that anchor the flagellum to the cell wall and the cytoplasmic membrane (see Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)) . Unlike eukaryotic flagella, the bacterial flagellum has no internal fibrils and does not flex. Instead, the basal body acts as a rotary molecular motor, enabling the flagellum to rotate and propel the bacterium through the surrounding fluid. In fact, the flagellar motor rotates very rapidly. (Some flagella can rotate up to 300 revolutions per second!)
The MotA and MotB proteins form the stator of the flagellar motor and function to generate torque for rotation of the flagellum. The MS and C rings function as the rotor. (See Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\)) . Energy for rotation comes from the proton motive force provided by protons moving through the Mot proteins along a concentration gradient from the peptidoglycan and periplasm towards the cytoplasm.
- Electron micrograph and illustration of the basal body of bacterial flagella; Cover photo of Molecular Biology of the Cell , May 1, 2000.
- Animation of a rotating bacterial flagellum from the ARN Molecular Museum
- YouTube movie of the assembly and rotation of a bacterial flagellum
Bacteria flagella (see Figure \(\PageIndex{2}\) and Figure \(\PageIndex{3}\) ) are 10-20 µm long and between 0.01 and 0.02 µm in diameter.
Flagellar Arrangements (see Figure \(\PageIndex{4}\))
1. monotrichous : a single flagellum, usually at one pole
- Scanning electron micrograph showing monotrichous flagellum of Vibrio ; courtesy of CDC.
2. amphitrichous : a single flagellum at both ends of the organism
3. lophotrichous : two or more flagella at one or both poles
- Scanning electron micrograph of Helicobacter pylori showing lophotrichous arrangement of flagella ; from Science Photolab.com
4. peritrichous : flagella over the entire surface
- Scanning electron micrograph of Proteus vulgaris showing peritrichous arrangement of flagella and pili; from fineartamerica.com
5. axial filaments: internal flagella found only in the spirochetes. Axial filaments are composed of from two to over a hundred axial fibrils (or endoflagella) that extend from both ends of the bacterium between the outer membrane and the cell wall, often overlapping in the center of the cell. (see Figure \(\PageIndex{5}\) and Figure \(\PageIndex{6}\) ). A popular theory as to the mechanism behind spirochete motility presumes that as the endoflagella rotate in the periplasmic space between the outer membrane and the cell wall, this could cause the corkscrew-shaped outer membrane of the spirochete to rotate and propel the bacterium through the surrounding fluid.
- Axial filaments of the spirochete Leptospira; Midlands Technical College, Bio 255 course site
|
Concept map for Bacterial Flagella
|
Functions
Flagella are the organelles of locomotion for most of the bacteria that are capable of motility. Two proteins in the flagellar motor, called MotA and MotB, form a proton channel through the cytoplasmic membrane and rotation of the flagellum is driven by a proton gradient. This driving proton motive force occurs as protons accumulating in the space between the cytoplasmic membrane and the cell wall as a result of the electron transport system travel through the channel back into the bacterium's cytoplasm. Most bacterial flagella can rotate both counterclockwise and clockwise and this rotation contributes to the bacterium's ability to change direction as it swims. A protein switch in the molecular motor of the basal body controls the direction of rotation.
1. A bacterium with peritrichous flagella:
If a bacterium has a peritrichous arrangement of flagella, counterclockwise rotation of the flagella causes them to form a single bundle that propels the bacterium in long, straight or curved runs without a change in direction. Counterclockwise rotation causes the flagellum to exhibit a left-handed helix. During a run, that lasts about one second, the bacterium moves 10 - 20 times its length before it stops. This occurs when some of the the flagella rotate clockwise, disengage from the bundle, and trigger a tumbling motion. Clockwise rotation causes the flagellum to assume a right-handed helix. A tumble only lasts about one-tenth of a second and no real forward progress is made. After a “tumble”, the direction of the next bacterial run is random because every time the bacterium stops swimming, Brownian motion and fluid currents cause the bacterium to reorient in a new direction.
|
Movie of swimming
Escherichia coli
as seen with phase contrast microscopy
.
Flagella are not visible with under phase contrast microscopy. Note runs and tumbles. Courtesy of Dr. Howard C. Berg from the Roland Institute at Harvard. |
|
Movie of motile
Escherichia coli
with fluorescent labelled-flagella #1
.
This technique allows the the flagella to be seen as the bacteria swim. Note some flagella leaving the flagellar bundle to initiate tumbling. Courtesy of Dr. Howard C. Berg from the Roland Institute at Harvard. |
|
Movie of motile
Escherichia coli
with fluorescent labelled-flagella #2
.
This technique allows the the flagella to be seen as the bacteria swim. Note some flagella leaving the flagellar bundle to initiate tumbling. Courtesy of Dr. Howard C. Berg from the Roland Institute at Harvard. |
|
Movie of tethered
Escherichia coli
showing that the bacterial flagella rotate.
Courtesy of Dr. Howard C. Berg from the Roland Institute at Harvard. |
When bacteria with a peritrichous arrangement grow on a nutrient-rich solid surface, they can exhibit a swarming motility wherein the bacteria elongate, synthesize additional flagella, secrete wetting agents, and move across the surface in coordinated manner.
|
Movie of swarming motility of
Escherichia coli
.
Courtesy of Dr. Howard C. Berg from the Roland Institute at Harvard. |
2. A bacterium with polar flagella:
Most bacteria with polar flagella, like the peritrichous above, can rotate their flagella both clockwise and counterclockwise. If the flagellum is rotating counterclockwise, it pushes the bacterium forward. When it rotates clockwise, it pulls the bacterium backward. These bacteria change direction by changing the rotation of their flagella.
Video \(\PageIndex{4}\)B.1: Phase contrast movie of motile Pseudomonas. Pseudomonas has a single polar flagellum that can rotate both counterclockwise and clockwise but is not visible under phase contrast microscopy ( http://www.youtube.com/embed/EWj2TGsTQEI ).
|
Movie of
Spirillum volutans
, a spiral-shaped bacterium with a bundle of flagella at either end.
Courtesy of Dr. Howard C. Berg from the Roland Institute at Harvard. |
Some bacteria with polar flagella can only rotate their flagellum clockwise. In this case, clockwise rotation pushes the bacterium forward. Every time the bacterium stops, Brownian motion and fluid currents cause the bacterium to reorient in a new direction.
|
Movie of
Rhodobacter spheroides
with fluorescent-labelled flagella.
The flagellum can only rotate clockwise. Courtesy of Dr. Howard C. Berg from the Roland Institute at Harvard. |
Taxis
Around half of all known bacteria are motile. Motility serves to keep bacteria in an optimum environment via taxis. Taxis is a motile response to an environmental stimulus. Bacteria can respond to chemicals (chemotaxis), light (phototaxis), osmotic pressure (osmotaxis), oxygen (aerotaxis), and temperature (thermotaxis). Chemotaxis is a response to a chemical gradient of attractant or repellent molecules in the bacterium's environment.
- In an environment that lacks a gradient of attractant or repellent, the bacterium moves randomly. In this way the bacterium keeps searching for a gradient.
- In an environment that has a gradient of attractant or repellent, the net movement of the bacterium is towards the attractant or away from the repellent.
|
For More Information: Chemotaxis in
Escherichia coli
|
Chemotaxis is regulated by chemoreceptors located in the cytoplasmic membrane or periplasm of the bacterium bind chemical attractants or repellents. In most cases, this leads to either the methylation or demethylation of methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) that in turn, eventually trigger either a counterclockwise or clockwise rotation of the flagellum. An increasing concentration of attractant or decreasing concentration of repellent (both conditions beneficial) causes less tumbling and longer runs; a decreasing concentration of attractant or increasing concentration of repellent (both conditions harmful) causes normal tumbling and a greater chance of reorienting in a "better" direction. As a result, the organism's net movement is toward the optimum environment..
Significance of Flagella in the Initiation of Body Defense
Initiation of Innate Immunity
To protect against infection, one of the things the body must initially do is detect the presence of microorganisms. The body does this by recognizing molecules unique to microorganisms that are not associated with human cells. These unique molecules are called pathogen-associated molecular patterns or PAMPs. (Because all microbes, not just pathogenic microbes, possess PAMPs, pathogen-associated molecular patterns are sometimes referred to as microbe-associated molecular patterns or MAMPs.)
The protein flagellin in bacterial flagella is a PAMP that binds to pattern-recognition receptors or PRRs on a variety of defense cells of the body and triggers innate immune defenses such as inflammation, fever, and phagocytosis.
|
For More Information: Pathogen-Associated Molecular Patterns (PAMPs) from Unit 5
|
|
For More Information: Pattern-Recognition Receptors from Unit 5
|
Initiation of Adaptive Immunity
Proteins associated with bacterial flagella function as antigens and initiate adaptive immunity. An antigen is defined as a molecular shape that reacts with antibody molecules and with antigen receptors on lymphocytes. We recognize those molecular shapes as foreign or different from our body's molecular shapes because they fit specific antigen receptors on our B-lymphocytes and T-lymphocytes, the cells that carry out adaptive immunity.
The actual portions or fragments of an antigen that react with antibodies and with receptors on B-lymphocytes and T-lymphocytes are called epitopes. An epitope is typically a group of 5-15 amino acids with a unique shape that makes up a portion of a protein antigen, or 3-4 sugar residues branching off of a polysaccharide antigen. A single microorganism has many hundreds of different shaped epitopes that our lymphocytes can recognize as foreign and mount an adaptive immune response against.
The body recognizes an antigen as foreign when epitopes of that antigen bind to B-lymphocytes and T-lymphocytes by means of epitope-specific receptor molecules having a shape complementary to that of the epitope. The epitope receptor on the surface of a B-lymphocyte is called a B-cell receptor and is actually an antibody molecule. The receptor on a T-lymphocyte is called a T-cell receptor (TCR).
There are two major branches of the adaptive immune responses: humoral immunity and cell-mediated immunity.
- Humoral immunity: Humoral immunity involves the production of antibody molecules in response to an antigen and is mediated by B-lymphocytes. Through a variety of mechanisms, these antibodies are able to remove or neutralize microorganisms and their toxins after binding to their epitopes. For example, antibodies made against flagellar antigens can stick bacteria to phagocytes, a process called opsonization. They can also interfere with bacterial motility.
- Cell-mediated immunity: Cell-mediated immunity involves the production of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes, activated macrophages, activated NK cells, and cytokines in response to an antigen and is mediated by T-lymphocytes. These defense cells help to remove infected cells and cancer cells displaying foreign epitopes.
Adaptive immunity will be discussed in greater detail in Unit 6.
|
For More Information: Review of antigens and epitopes from Unit 6
|
Significance of Motility to Bacterial Pathogenicity
Motility and chemotaxis probably help some intestinal pathogens to move through the mucous layer so they can attach to the epithelial cells of the mucous membranes. In fact, many bacteria that can colonize the mucous membranes of the bladder and the intestines are motile. Motility probably helps these bacteria move through the mucus in places where it is less viscous.
|
Flash animation showing a motile bacterium contacting a host cell by swimming through the mucus.
|
|
html5 version of animation for iPad showing a motile bacterium contacting a host cell by swimming through the mucus.
|
Motility and chemotaxis also enable spirochetes to move through viscous environments and penetrate cell membranes. Examples include Treponema pallidum (inf) , Leptospira (inf) , and Borrelia burgdorferi ) (inf) . Because of their thinness, their internal flagella (axial filaments), and their motility, spirochetes are more readily able to penetrate host mucous membranes, skin abrasions, etc., and enter the body. Motility and invasins may also enable the spirochetes to penetrate deeper in tissue and enter the lymphatics and bloodstream and disseminate to other body sites.
|
Flash animation showing spirochetes using motility to enter a blood vessel.
|
|
html5 version of animation for iPad showing spirochetes using motility to enter a blood vessel.
|
|
Movie of motile
Borrelia bergdorferi
, the spirochete that causes Lyme disease. Note corkscrewing motility.
From You Tube, courtesy of CytoVivo. |
Electron micrograph of Treponema pallidum invading a host cell.
This will be discussed in more detail under Bacterial Pathogenesis in Unit 3.
Summary
- Many bacteria are motile and use flagella to swim through liquid environments.
- The basal body of a bacterial flagellum functions as a rotary molecular motor, enabling the flagellum to rotate and propel the bacterium through the surrounding fluid.
- Bacterial flagella appear in several arrangements, each unique to a particular organism.
- Motility serves to keep bacteria in an optimum environment via taxis.
- Taxis refers to a motile response to an environmental stimulus enabling the net movement of bacteria towards some beneficial attractant or away from some harmful repellent.
- Most bacterial flagella can rotate both clockwise and counterclockwise enabling to stop and change direction.
- The protein flagellin that forms the filament of bacterial flagella functions as a pathogen-associated molecular pattern or PAMP that binds to pattern-recognition receptors or PRRs on a variety of defense cells of the body to trigger innate immune defenses.
- Motility and chemotaxis probably help some intestinal pathogens to move through the mucous layer so they can attach to the epithelial cells of the mucous membranes and colonize the intestines.
- Motility enables some spirochetes to penetrate deeper in tissue and enter the lymphatics and bloodstream and disseminate to other body sites.
Questions
Study the material in this section and then write out the answers to these questions. Do not just click on the answers and write them out. This will not test your understanding of this tutorial.
-
_____ a single flagellum at both ends
(ans)
- monotrichous
- amphitrichous
- lophotrichous
- peritrichous
- axial filaments
- State how bacterial flagella may play a role in the initiation of innate immune defenses. (ans)
- Briefly describe how bacterial flagella and chemotaxis may play a role in the pathogenocity of some bacteria. (ans)
- Multiple Choice (ans)