Dynamic stiffening of the flagellar hook
Ashley L. Nord, Anais Biquet-Bisquert, Manouk Abkarian, Th\'eo, Pigaglio, Farida Seduk, Axel Magalon, Francesco Pedaci

TL;DR
This study reveals that bacterial flagellar hooks dynamically stiffen under torsional stress, balancing flexibility for bundle formation and rigidity for high-speed motility through strain-stiffening behavior.
Contribution
The paper introduces high-resolution measurements and analysis showing that bacterial flagellar hooks increase their bending stiffness significantly under load, demonstrating strain-stiffening in vivo.
Findings
Hook stiffness increases with applied torque
Persistence length of hooks grows over tenfold under stress
Strain-stiffening enables flexible yet robust bacterial motility
Abstract
Many bacteria are motile by means of one or more rotating rigid helical flagella, making them the only known organism to use rotation as a means of propulsion. The rotation is supplied by the bacterial flagellar motor, a particularly powerful rotary molecular machine. At the base of each flagellum is the hook, a soft helical polymer that acts as a universal joint, coupling rotation of the rigid membrane-spanning rotor to rotation of the rigid extra-cellular flagellum. In multi-flagellated bacterial species, where thrust is provided by a hydrodynamically coordinated bundle of flagella, the flexibility of the hook is particularly crucial, as many of the flagella within the bundle rotate significantly off-axis from their motor. But, consequently, the thrust produced by a single rotating flagellum applies a significant bending moment to the hook. So, the hook needs to simultaneously provide…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTribology and Lubrication Engineering · Soil Mechanics and Vehicle Dynamics
