How P. aeruginosa cells with diverse stator composition collectively swarm
Jaime de Anda, Sherry L. Kuchma, Shanice S. Webster, Arman Boromand, Kimberley A. Lewis, Calvin K. Lee, Maria Contreras, Victor F. Medeiros Pereira, William Schmidt, Deborah A. Hogan, Corey S. O’Hern, George A. O’Toole, Gerard C. L. Wong

TL;DR
P. aeruginosa bacteria use different stators in their flagellar motors to collectively control swarming behavior, with MotCD stators being more active and influencing population motility.
Contribution
The study reveals that stator selection in P. aeruginosa flagellar motors leads to heterogeneous motility and collective swarming behavior.
Findings
MotCD stators are ~10× more likely to produce active motors than MotAB stators.
Swarming motility in P. aeruginosa is collectively controlled by diverse flagellar activities and motor intermittencies.
Stator utilization influences surface sensing and jamming transitions in active granular matter.
Abstract
Swarming is a macroscopic phenomenon in which surface bacteria organize into a motile population. The flagellar motor that drives swarming in Pseudomonas aeruginosa is powered by stators MotAB and MotCD. Deletion of the MotCD stator eliminates swarming, whereas deletion of the MotAB stator enhances swarming. Interestingly, we measured a strongly asymmetric stator availability in the wild-type (WT) strain, with MotAB stators produced at an approximately 40-fold higher level than MotCD stators. However, utilization of MotCD stators in free swimming cells requires higher liquid viscosities, while MotAB stators are readily utilized at low viscosities. Importantly, we find that cells with MotCD stators are ~10× more likely to have an active motor compared to cells uses the MotAB stators. The spectrum of motility intermittency can either cooperatively shut down or promote flagellum motility…
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Taxonomy
TopicsComparative Literary Analysis and Criticism · Spanish Literature and Culture Studies · Spanish Culture and Identity
