Contact-Dependent Ion Gating Explains Directional Asymmetry in the Bacterial Flagellar Motor
Jiading Zhu, Yongnan Hu, Yuhai Tu, and Yuansheng Cao

TL;DR
This paper presents a mechanochemical model explaining the directional asymmetry in bacterial flagellar motor torque-speed relations through contact-dependent ion gating mechanisms, supported by structural and simulation data.
Contribution
It introduces a contact-dependent gating model that accounts for CW-CCW asymmetry, linking molecular interactions to functional differences in the motor.
Findings
Differential gating strength explains torque-speed asymmetry.
Tighter MotA-FliG contact in CW reduces ion release rate.
Model aligns with cryo-EM and molecular dynamics data.
Abstract
The bacterial flagellar motor (BFM) is a rotary molecular machine driven by the ion electrochemical potential across the cell membrane. Recent cryo-EM structures reveal a cogwheel-like architecture in which multiple stators engage a large rotor. A longstanding puzzle is the directional asymmetry of its torque-speed relation: concave in counterclockwise (CCW) rotation but nearly linear in clockwise (CW) rotation. Here, we develop a stochastic mechanochemical model that explicitly incorporates rotor-stator coupling and detailed ion translocation kinetics. By integrating physiological torque-speed data with recent measurements of rotor-stator relative motion, we show that under physiological conditions the motor operates in a tight engagement regime, rendering the torque-speed relation largely insensitive to the specific form of mechanical interactions. This finding rules out differences…
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