Structure of FliM provides insight into assembly of the switch complex in the bacterial flagella motor
- 8 August 2006
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 103 (32) , 11886-11891
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0602811103
Abstract
Bacteria switch the direction their flagella rotate to control movement. FliM, along with FliN and FliG, compose a complex in the motor that, upon binding phosphorylated CheY, reverses the sense of flagellar rotation. The 2.0-A resolution structure of the FliM middle domain (FliM(M)) from Thermotoga maritima reveals a pseudo-2-fold symmetric topology similar to the CheY phosphatases CheC and CheX. A variable structural element, which, in CheC, mediates binding to CheD (alpha2') and, in CheX, mediates dimerization (beta'(x)), has a truncated structure unique to FliM (alpha2'). An exposed helix of FliM(M) (alpha1) does not contain the catalytic residues of CheC and CheX but does include positions conserved in FliM sequences. Cross-linking experiments with site-directed cysteine mutants show that FliM self-associates through residues on alpha1 and alpha2'. CheY activated by BeF(3)(-) binds to FliM with approximately 40-fold higher affinity than CheY (K(d) = 0.04 microM vs. 2 microM). Mapping residue conservation, suppressor mutation sites, binding data, and deletion analysis onto the FliM(M) surface defines regions important for contacts with the stator-interacting protein FliG and for either counterclockwise or clockwise rotation. Association of 33-35 FliM subunits would generate a 44- to 45-nm-diameter disk, consistent with the known dimensions of the C-ring. The localization of counterclockwise- and clockwise-biasing mutations to distinct surfaces suggests that the binding of phosphorylated CheY cooperatively realigns FliM around the ring.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- Crystal Structure of the Flagellar Rotor Protein FliN from Thermotoga maritimaJournal of Bacteriology, 2005
- Making sense of it all: bacterial chemotaxisNature Reviews Molecular Cell Biology, 2004
- Structure of the Rotor of the Bacterial Flagellar Motor Revealed by Electron Cryomicroscopy and Single-particle Image AnalysisJournal of Molecular Biology, 2004
- Structures of Bacterial Flagellar Motors from Two FliF-FliG Gene Fusion MutantsJournal of Bacteriology, 2001
- Crystal Structure of Activated CheYJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2001
- The N terminus of the flagellar switch protein, FliM, is the binding domain for the chemotactic response regulator, CheYJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998
- Rapid refinement of protein interfaces incorporating solvation: application to the docking problemJournal of Molecular Biology, 1998
- Distinct regions of bacterial flagellar switch protein FliM interact with FliG, FliN and CheYJournal of Molecular Biology, 1997
- [20] Processing of X-ray diffraction data collected in oscillation modePublished by Elsevier ,1997
- A visual protein crystallographic software system for X11/XviewJournal of Molecular Graphics, 1992