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Myxococcus xanthus, a predatory soil bacterium, has long been used as a model organism to study bacterial gliding motility. Research has revealed that two fundamentally distinct motor systems power gliding in this bacterium: repeated extensions and retractions of pili mediate social or (S-) motility, whereas the motor powering adventurous or (A-) motility has not yet been identified with certainty. Several different hypotheses to explain A-motility have been suggested and differ with respect to the involved motor structures as well as the mechanics of motility. As some of the more recent models invoke helically arranged structures and processes that require rotations of the cell, we decided to re-examine myxobacterial motility using microcinematographic techniques. This re-examination was also prompted by the lack of direct experimental data on the rotation of M. xanthus during gliding. Microcinematographic observations of deformed cells and cells containing large stationary intracellular structures reveal clearly that M. xanthus gliding does not require cell rotation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jobm.201200307 | DOI Listing |
J Basic Microbiol
September 2013
W. Harry Feinstone Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, USA.
Myxococcus xanthus, a predatory soil bacterium, has long been used as a model organism to study bacterial gliding motility. Research has revealed that two fundamentally distinct motor systems power gliding in this bacterium: repeated extensions and retractions of pili mediate social or (S-) motility, whereas the motor powering adventurous or (A-) motility has not yet been identified with certainty. Several different hypotheses to explain A-motility have been suggested and differ with respect to the involved motor structures as well as the mechanics of motility.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
July 2007
Université Catholique de Louvain, Unité de Pharmacologie Cellulaire et Moléculaire, Avenue E. Mounier 73, Bt 7370, B-1200 Brussels, Belgium.
The elastic properties of membrane bilayers are key parameters that control its deformation and can be affected by pharmacological agents. Our previous atomic force microscopy studies revealed that the macrolide antibiotic, azithromycin, leads to erosion of DPPC domains in a fluid DOPC matrix [A. Berquand, M.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiorheology
March 1998
Department of Chemical Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA.
Arterial fluid mechanics may play a role as a localizing factor for early atherosclerosis. Flow patterns in natural rabbit aortas rendered transparent were studied using a microcinematographic visualization technique. The aortic arch exhibited a single cell of clockwise-rotating helical secondary flow along the ventral and inner walls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Reprod Fertil
January 1997
Université Catholique de Louvain, Unité des Sciences Vétérinaires, Louvain-La-Neuve, Belgium.
Acta Haematol
April 1997
Neukölln Hospital, Berlin Free University, Germany.
Microcinematographic documentation of mitoses, amitoses, endomitoses, or cytoplasmic fusion shortly after completion of mitoses was done in bone marrow specimens of patients with quantitative platelet disorders and controls. In patients with platelet disorders, most mitoses with cell duplication occurred in large promegakaryocytes after 4-fold nuclear and cytoplasmic enhancement. Normal specimens showed polyploidization happening in small megakaryoblasts, while mitoses with cell duplication were seen only after cultivation in freeze-thawed sera of patients with platelet disorders.
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