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The bacterial flagellum is a macromolecular protein complex that harvests energy from uni-directional ion flow across the inner membrane to power bacterial swimming via rotation of the flagellar filament. Rotation is bi-directional, with binding of a cytoplasmic chemotactic response regulator controlling reversal, though the structural and mechanistic bases for rotational switching are not well understood. Here we present cryoelectron microscopy structures of intact Salmonella flagellar basal bodies (3.2-5.5 Å), including the cytoplasmic C-ring complexes required for power transmission, in both counter-clockwise and clockwise rotational conformations. These reveal 180° movements of both the N- and C-terminal domains of the FliG protein, which, when combined with a high-resolution cryoelectron microscopy structure of the MotA5B2 stator, show that the stator shifts from the outside to the inside of the C-ring. This enables rotational switching and reveals how uni-directional ion flow across the inner membrane is used to accomplish bi-directional rotation of the flagellum.

Original publication

DOI

10.1038/s41564-024-01630-z

Type

Journal article

Journal

Nat Microbiol

Publication Date

05/2024

Volume

9

Pages

1282 - 1292

Keywords

Bacterial Proteins, Cryoelectron Microscopy, Flagella, Basal Bodies, Models, Molecular, Rotation, Protein Conformation, Salmonella, Salmonella typhimurium