Involvement of periplasmic fibrils in motility of spirochetes

Abstract
Nonmotile (Mot-) strains of Spirochaeta aurantia and Spirochaeta halophila were isolated with a procedure involving mutagenesis of motile wild-type cells. Electron microscopy showed that a Mot- mutant strain of S. halophia possessed incomplete periplasmic fibrils, inasmuch as most or all of the filamentous portion of the periplasmic fibrils was absent. Some of the cells of this Mot-, fibril-defective mutant strain lacked the filamentous portion of the periplasmic fibrils and formed proximal hooks, whereas other cells appeared to have a very small segment of the filamentous portion of the periplasmic fibrils attached to the proximal hooks. Motile revertants were isolated repeatedly from cultures of the Mot-, fibril-defective mutant and from S. halophila Mot- mutants that completely lacked periplasmic fibrils. The motile revertants possessed periplasmic fibrils ultrastructurally indistinguishable from wild-type periplasmic fibrils. This study indicates that periplasmic fibrils play an essential role in the motility of spirochetes.

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