2001-2002

2002-2003
Dr. Arwen Pearson

The complete atomic model of the bacterial flagellar filament by electron cryomicroscopy. 

Yonekura, Maki-Yonekura & Namba (Nature 424:643-650, 2003). Please come to help us celebrate Arwen's birthday.

The bacterial flagellar filament is a helical propeller for bacterial locomotion. It is a helical assembly of a single protein, flagellin, and its tubular structure is formed by 11 protofilaments in two distinct conformations, L- and R-type, for supercoiling. The X-ray crystal structure of a flagellin fragment lacking about 100 terminal residues revealed the protofilament structure, but the full filament structure is still essential for understanding the mechanism of supercoiling and polymerization. Here we report a complete atomic model of the R-type filament by electron cryomicroscopy. A density map obtained from image data up to 4 Å resolution shows the feature of alpha-helical backbone and some large side chains. The atomic model built on the map reveals intricate molecular packing and an alpha-helical coiled coil formed by the terminal chains in the inner core of the filament, with its intersubunit hydrophobic interactions having an important role in stabilizing the filament.



Date: October 20th
Time: Noon to 1
Place: BSBE 4-101



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