Halte Manuel, Popp Philipp F, Hathcock David, Severn John, Fischer Svenja, Goosmann Christian, Ducret Adrien, Charpentier Emmanuelle, Tu Yuhai, Lauga Eric, Erhardt Marc, Renault Thibaud T
Institute of Biology-Department of Molecular Microbiology, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin 10115, Germany.
IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Heights, NY 10598.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2025 Mar 18;122(11):e2413488122. doi: 10.1073/pnas.2413488122. Epub 2025 Mar 11.
The flagellum is the most complex macromolecular structure known in bacteria and is composed of around two dozen distinct proteins. The main building block of the long, external flagellar filament, flagellin, is secreted through the flagellar type-III secretion system at a remarkable rate of several tens of thousands of amino acids per second, significantly surpassing the rates achieved by other pore-based protein secretion systems. The evolutionary implications and potential benefits of this high secretion rate for flagellum assembly and function, however, have remained elusive. In this study, we provide both experimental and theoretical evidence that the flagellar secretion rate has been evolutionarily optimized to facilitate rapid and efficient construction of a functional flagellum. By synchronizing flagellar assembly, we found that a minimal filament length of 2.5 μm was required for swimming motility. Biophysical modeling revealed that this minimal filament length threshold resulted from an elasto-hydrodynamic instability of the whole swimming cell, dependent on the filament length. Furthermore, we developed a stepwise filament labeling method combined with electron microscopy visualization to validate predicted flagellin secretion rates of up to 10,000 amino acids per second. A biophysical model of flagellum growth demonstrates that the observed high flagellin secretion rate efficiently balances filament elongation and energy consumption, thereby enabling motility in the shortest amount of time. Taken together, these insights underscore the evolutionary pressures that have shaped the development and optimization of the flagellum and type-III secretion system, illuminating the intricate interplay and cost-benefit tradeoff between functionality and efficiency in assembly of large macromolecular structures.
鞭毛是细菌中已知的最复杂的大分子结构,由大约二十多种不同的蛋白质组成。鞭毛蛋白是长的外部鞭毛丝的主要组成部分,它通过鞭毛III型分泌系统以每秒数万氨基酸的惊人速度分泌,大大超过了其他基于孔的蛋白质分泌系统所达到的速度。然而,这种高分泌率对鞭毛组装和功能的进化意义及潜在益处仍然难以捉摸。在本研究中,我们提供了实验和理论证据,表明鞭毛分泌率在进化过程中经过优化,以促进功能性鞭毛的快速高效构建。通过同步鞭毛组装过程,我们发现游动运动需要至少2.5μm的丝状体长度。生物物理模型表明,这个最小丝状体长度阈值是由整个游动细胞的弹性流体动力学不稳定性导致的,该不稳定性取决于丝状体长度。此外,我们开发了一种逐步丝状体标记方法,并结合电子显微镜可视化技术,以验证预测的高达每秒10,000个氨基酸的鞭毛蛋白分泌率。鞭毛生长的生物物理模型表明,观察到的高鞭毛蛋白分泌率有效地平衡了丝状体伸长和能量消耗,从而能够在最短时间内实现运动。综上所述,这些见解强调了塑造鞭毛和III型分泌系统发展与优化的进化压力,阐明了在大型大分子结构组装中功能与效率之间复杂的相互作用和成本效益权衡。