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Effect of the MotA(M206I) mutation on torque generation and stator assembly in the Salmonella H + -driven flagellar motor.

Journal of Bacteriology 2019 January 15
The bacterial flagellar motor is composed of a rotor and a dozen stators and converts the ion flux through the stator into torque. Each stator unit alternates in its attachment to and detachment from the rotor even during rotation. In some species, stator assembly depends on the input energy, but it remains unclear how an electrochemical potential across the membrane (e.g., proton motive force; PMF) or ion flux is involved in stator assembly dynamics. Here we focused on pH dependence of a slow motile MotA(M206I) mutant of Salmonella The MotA(M206I) motor produces torque comparable to the wild-type motor near stall, but its rotation rate is considerably decreased as the external load is reduced. Rotation assays of flagella labeled with 1-μm beads showed that the rotation rate of the MotA(M206I) motor is increased by lowering the external pH whereas that of the wild-type motor is not. Measurements of the speed produced by a single stator unit using 1-μm beads showed that the unit speed of the MotA(M206I) is about 60% of the wild-type one and that a decrease in external pH did not affect the MotA(M206I) unit speed. Analysis of the subcellular stator localization revealed that the number of functional stators is restored by lowering external pH. The pH-dependent improvement of stator assembly was observed even when PMF was collapsed and proton transfer was inhibited. These results suggest that MotA Met-206 is responsible not only for load-dependent energy coupling between the proton influx and rotation but also for pH-dependent stator assembly. IMPORTANCE The bacterial flagellar motor is a rotary nanomachine driven by the electrochemical transmembrane potential (ion motive force). About 10 stators (MotA/B complexes) are docked around a rotor, and the stator recruitment depends on the load, ion motive force, and coupling-ion flux. The MotA(M206I) mutation slows motor rotation and decreases the number of docked stators in Salmonella We show that lowering the external pH improve the assembly of the mutant stators. Neither the collapse of the ion motive force nor a mutation mimicking the proton-binding state inhibited stator localization to the motor. These results suggest that MotA Met-206 is involved in torque generation and proton translocation and that stator assembly is stabilized by protonation of the stator.

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