Many motile bacteria swim or swarm using a filamentous rotating organelle, the flagellum. FliL, a component protein of the flagellar motor, is known to enhance the motor performance under high-load conditions in some bacteria. Here we determined the structure of the periplasmic region of FliL (FliLPeri) of the polar flagellum of Vibrio alginolyticus. FliLPeri shows a remarkable structural similarity to the stomatin/prohibitin/flotillin/HflK/C (SPFH) domain of stomatin family proteins, some of which are involved in modulation of ion channel activities in various organisms. FliLPeri forms a ring assembly in the crystal with an inner diameter of around 8 nm, which is comparable to the size of the stator unit. Mutational analyses suggest that the FliL ring forms a complex with the stator unit and that the length of the periplasmic linkers of FliL and the stator B-subunit is essential for the complex formation. We propose a model of the FliL-stator complex to discuss how Vibrio FliL modulates stator function in the bacterial flagellar motor under conditions of high viscosity.
IMPORTANCE Some flagellated bacteria regulate motor torque in response to the external load change. This behavior is critical for survival, but the mechanism has remained unknown. Here, we focused on a key protein, FliL of Vibrio alginolyticus, and solved the crystal structure of its periplasmic region (FliLPeri). FliLPeri reveals striking structural similarity to a conserved domain of stomatin, which is involved in ion channel regulation in some organisms, including mammals. FliLPeri forms a ring with an inner diameter that is comparable in size to the stator unit. The mutational analyses suggested that the presence of the ring-like assembly of FliL around the stator unit enhances the surface swarming of Vibrio cells. Our study data also imply that the structural element for the ion channel regulation is conserved from bacteria to mammals.
In torque generation by the bacterial flagellar motor, it has been suggested that electrostatic interactions between charged residues of MotA and FliG at the rotor-stator interface are important. However, the actual role(s) of those charged residues has not yet been clarified. In this study, we systematically made mutants of Vibrio alginolyticus whose charged residues of PomA (MotA homologue) and FliG were replaced by uncharged or charge-reversed residues and characterized the motilities of those mutants. We found that the members of a group of charged residues, 7 in PomA and 6 in FliG, collectively participate in torque generation of the Na ؉ -driven flagellar motor in Vibrio. An additional specific interaction between PomA-E97 and FliG-K284 is critical for proper performance of the Vibrio motor. Our results also reveal that more charged residues are involved in the PomA-FliG interactions in the Vibrio Na ؉ -driven motor than in the MotA-FliG interactions in the H ؉ -driven one. This suggests that a larger number of conserved charged residues at the PomA-FliG interface contributes to the robustness of the Vibrio motor against mutations. The interaction surfaces of the stator and rotor of the Na ؉ -driven motor seem to be more complex than those previously proposed in the H ؉ -driven motor.
PomA and PomB form the stator complex, which functions as a Na(+) channel, in the Na(+)-driven flagellar motor of Vibrio alginolyticus. The plug region of PomB is thought to regulate the Na(+) flow and to suppress massive ion influx through the stator channel. In this study, in order to measure the Na(+) conductivity of the unplugged stator, we over-produced a plug-deleted stator of the Na(+)-driven flagellar motor in Escherichia coli. The over-production of the plug-deleted stator in E. coli cells caused more severe growth inhibition than in Vibrio cells and that growth inhibition depended on the Na(+) concentration in the growth medium. Measurement of intracellular Na(+) concentration by flame photometry and fluorescent analysis with a Na(+) indicator, Sodium Green, revealed that over-production of the plug-deleted stator increased the Na(+) concentration in cell. Some mutations in the channel region of PomB or in the cytoplasmic region of PomA suppressed both the growth inhibition and the increase in intracellular Na(+) concentration. These results suggest that the level of growth inhibition correlates with the intracellular Na(+) concentration, probably due to the Na(+) conductivity through the stator due to the mutations.
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