磁小体
趋磁细菌
生物物理学
磁接收
化学
生物
细胞生物学
磁铁矿
物理
地球磁场
磁场
量子力学
古生物学
作者
Mauricio Toro‐Nahuelpan,Giacomo Giacomelli,Oliver Raschdorf,Sarah Borg,Jürgen M. Plitzko,Marc Bramkamp,Dirk Schüler,Frank D. Müller
出处
期刊:Nature microbiology
日期:2019-07-29
卷期号:4 (11): 1978-1989
被引量:49
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41564-019-0512-8
摘要
To navigate within the geomagnetic field, magnetotactic bacteria synthesize magnetosomes, which are unique organelles consisting of membrane-enveloped magnetite nanocrystals. In magnetotactic spirilla, magnetosomes become actively organized into chains by the filament-forming actin-like MamK and the adaptor protein MamJ, thereby assembling a magnetic dipole much like a compass needle. However, in Magnetospirillum gryphiswaldense, discontinuous chains are still formed in the absence of MamK. Moreover, these fragmented chains persist in a straight conformation indicating undiscovered structural determinants able to accommodate a bar magnet-like magnetoreceptor in a helical bacterium. Here, we identify MamY, a membrane-bound protein that generates a sophisticated mechanical scaffold for magnetosomes. MamY localizes linearly along the positive inner cell curvature (the geodetic cell axis), probably by self-interaction and curvature sensing. In a mamY deletion mutant, magnetosome chains detach from the geodetic axis and fail to accommodate a straight conformation coinciding with reduced cellular magnetic orientation. Codeletion of mamKY completely abolishes chain formation, whereas on synthetic tethering of magnetosomes to MamY, the chain configuration is regained, emphasizing the structural properties of the protein. Our results suggest MamY is membrane-anchored mechanical scaffold that is essential to align the motility axis of magnetotactic spirilla with their magnetic moment vector and to perfectly reconcile magnetoreception with swimming direction.
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI