Swarming motility and the control of flagellar number in Bacillus subtilis

Date
Wednesday February 28, 2024
Time:
12:00pm - 1:00pm
Location
101 Barker Hall
About this event

Bacterial flagellar are complex transenvelope nanomachines, and both flagella number per cell and insertion pattern vary by species. For example, Bacillus subtilis assembles ~15 flagella per cell when swimming in liquid and we found that flagellar number must double in order to swarm across solid surfaces. I will discuss how a small protein SwrA controls flagellar number by inducing oligomerization of a two-component response regulator protein necessary for gene activation. I will also show that SwrA levels are restricted by a Lon/adaptor system that is antagonized when cells are in conditions that promote swarming. The talk will cover flagellar biology and behavior, fundamentals of gene activation, regulatory proteolysis, and the cell-surface contact response.