Dynamics of Type IV Pili Is Controlled by Switching Between Multiple States

Clausen M, Koomey M, Maier B

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Type IV pili are major bacterial virulence factors supporting adhesion, surface motility, and gene transfer. The polymeric pilus fiber is a highly dynamic molecular machine that switches between elongation and retraction. We used laser tweezers to investigate the dynamics of individual pili of Neisseria gonorrheae at clamped forces between 8 pN and 100 pN and at varying concentration of the retraction ATPase PilT. The elongation probability of individual pili increased with increasing mechanical force. Directional switching occurred on two distinct timescales, and regular stepping was absent on a scale > 3 nm. We found that the retraction velocity is bimodal and that the bimodality depends on force and on the concentration of PilT proteins. We conclude that the pilus motor is a multistate system with at least one polymerization mode and two depolymerization modes with the dynamics fine-tuned by force and HIT concentration.

Details about the publication

JournalBiophysical Journal (Biophys J.)
Volume96
Issue3
Page range1169-1177
StatusPublished
Release year2009 (04/02/2009)
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1016/j.bpj.2008.10.017
Keywordsenteropathogenic escherichia-coli twitching motility neisseria-gonorrhoeae surface motility retraction protein force biogenesis mutations kinetics

Authors from the University of Münster

Maier, Berenike
Institute for Molecular Cell Biology