Biophysics and Physicobiology
Online ISSN : 2189-4779
ISSN-L : 2189-4779

This article has now been updated. Please use the final version.

Gliding direction of Mycoplasma mobile correlates with the curved configuration of its cell shape
Kana SuzukiDaisuke NakaneMasaki MizutaniTakayuki Nishizaka
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JOURNAL OPEN ACCESS Advance online publication
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Article ID: e220006

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Abstract

The gliding motility of bacteria is not linear but somehow exhibits a curved trajectory. This general observation is explained by the helical structure of protein tracks (Nakane et al., 2013) or the asymmetric array of gliding machineries (Morio et al., 2016), but these interpretations have not been directly examined. Here, we introduced a simple assumption: the gliding trajectory of M. mobile is guided by the cell shape. To test this idea, the intensity profile of a bacterium, Mycoplasma mobile, was analyzed and reconstructed at the single-cell level from images captured under a highly stable dark-field microscope, which minimized the mechanical drift and noise during sequential image recording. The raw image with the size of ~1 μm, which is about four times larger than the diffraction limit of visible light, was successfully fitted by double Gaussians to quantitatively determine the curved configuration of its shape. By comparing the shape and curvature of a gliding motility, we found that the protruded portion of M. mobile correlated with, or possibly guided, its gliding direction. Considering the balance between decomposed gliding force and torque as a drag, a simple and general model that explains the curved trajectory of biomolecules under a low Reynolds number is proposed.

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