Department of Biomaterials, Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Potsdam, Germany.
Department of Theory and Bio-Systems, Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces, Potsdam, Germany.
Elife. 2020 Jan 28;9:e47551. doi: 10.7554/eLife.47551.
Bacteria propel and change direction by rotating long, helical filaments, called flagella. The number of flagella, their arrangement on the cell body and their sense of rotation hypothetically determine the locomotion characteristics of a species. The movement of the most rapid microorganisms has in particular remained unexplored because of additional experimental limitations. We show that magnetotactic cocci with two flagella bundles on one pole swim faster than 500 µm·s along a double helical path, making them one of the fastest natural microswimmers. We additionally reveal that the cells reorient in less than 5 ms, an order of magnitude faster than reported so far for any other bacteria. Using hydrodynamic modeling, we demonstrate that a mode where a pushing and a pulling bundle cooperate is the only possibility to enable both helical tracks and fast reorientations. The advantage of sheathed flagella bundles is the high rigidity, making high swimming speeds possible.
细菌通过旋转称为鞭毛的长螺旋状细丝来推进和改变方向。鞭毛的数量、它们在细胞体上的排列方式以及它们的旋转感觉假设决定了一个物种的运动特征。由于额外的实验限制,最快速的微生物的运动尤其仍未被探索。我们表明,具有两个鞭毛束在一个极上的磁细菌沿双螺旋路径以超过 500 µm·s 的速度更快地游动,使它们成为最快的天然微游泳者之一。我们还表明,细胞在不到 5 ms 的时间内重新定向,比迄今为止报道的任何其他细菌都快一个数量级。使用流体动力学模型,我们证明了一种推挽束合作的模式是使两个螺旋轨迹和快速重新定向成为可能的唯一可能性。鞘状鞭毛束的优势在于高刚性,使高速游泳成为可能。