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Recent Advances and Future Prospects in Bacterial and Archaeal Locomotion and Signal Transduction

Journal

JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY
Volume 199, Issue 18, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY
DOI: 10.1128/JB.00203-17

Keywords

chemotaxis; flagella; flagellar motility; signal transduction; two-component regulatory systems

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Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry for Economy and Competitiveness [BIO2013-42297, BIO2016-76779-P]
  2. Canada Foundation for Innovation

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The structure and function of two-component and chemotactic signaling and different aspects related to the motility of bacteria and archaea are key research areas in modern microbiology. Escherichia coli is the traditional model organism used to study chemotaxis signaling and motility. However, the recent study of a wide range of bacteria and even some archaea with different lifestyles has provided new insight into the ecophysiology of chemotaxis, which is essential for the establishment of different pathogens or beneficial bacteria in a host. The expanded range of model organisms has also permitted the study of chemosensory pathways unrelated to chemotaxis, multiple chemotaxis pathways within an organism, and new types of chemoreceptors. This research has greatly benefitted from technical advances in the field of cryomicroscopy, which continues to reveal with increasing resolution the complexity and diversity of large protein complexes like the flagellar motor or chemoreceptor arrays. In addition, sensitive instruments now allow an increasing number of experiments to be conducted at the single-cell level, thereby revealing information that is beginning to bridge the gap between individual cells and population behavior. Evidence has also accumulated showing that bacteria have evolved different mechanisms for surface sensing, which appears to be mediated by flagella and possibly type IV pili, and that the downstream signaling involves chemosensory pathways and two-component-system-based processes. Herein, we summarize the recent advances and research tendencies in this field as presented at the latest Bacterial Locomotion and Signal Transduction (BLAST XIV) conference.

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