Type I pili are proteinaceous tethers that mediate bacterial adhesion of uropathogenic Escherichia coli to surfaces and are thought to help bacteria resist drag forces imparted by fluid flow via uncoiling of their quaternary structure. Uncoiling and recoiling have been observed in force spectroscopy experiments, but it is not clear if and how this process occurs under fluid flow. Here we developed an assay to study the mechanical properties of pili in a parallel plate flow chamber. We show that pili extend when attached E. coli bacteria are exposed to increasing shear stresses, that pili can help bacteria move against moderate fluid flows, and characterize two dynamic regimes of this displacement. The first regime is consistent with entropi...
International audienceS pili are members of the chaperone-usher-pathway-assembled pili family that a...
Adhesion pili assembled by the chaperone-usher pathway are superelastic helical filaments on the sur...
A variety of bacterial pathogens use nanoscale protein fibers called type IV pili to mediate cell ad...
<div><p>Type I pili are proteinaceous tethers that mediate bacterial adhesion of uropathogenic <i>Es...
Type I pili are proteinaceous tethers that mediate bacterial adhesion of uropathogenic Escherichia c...
AbstractUropathogenic Escherichia coli express pili that mediate binding to host tissue cells. We de...
ABSTRACT The first step in the encounter between a host and a pathogen is attachment to the host epi...
AbstractThe first step in the encounter between a host and a pathogen is attachment to the host epit...
AbstractSurface organelles (so-called pili) expressed on the bacterial membrane mediate the adhesion...
Many infection processes start with primary adhesion of pathogenic bacteria to host cells. The Gram-...
AbstractThe mechanical behavior of individual P pili of uropathogenic Escherichia coli has been inve...
Pili produced by Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis are putative linear structures consisting of repet...
We are grateful to Birgitta Henriques-Normark for providing the strains and to Bernt Eric Uhlin and ...
Type 1 fimbriae mediate adhesion of uropathogenic Escherichia coli to host cells. It has been hypoth...
Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is increasing at a high rate in both developing and developed co...
International audienceS pili are members of the chaperone-usher-pathway-assembled pili family that a...
Adhesion pili assembled by the chaperone-usher pathway are superelastic helical filaments on the sur...
A variety of bacterial pathogens use nanoscale protein fibers called type IV pili to mediate cell ad...
<div><p>Type I pili are proteinaceous tethers that mediate bacterial adhesion of uropathogenic <i>Es...
Type I pili are proteinaceous tethers that mediate bacterial adhesion of uropathogenic Escherichia c...
AbstractUropathogenic Escherichia coli express pili that mediate binding to host tissue cells. We de...
ABSTRACT The first step in the encounter between a host and a pathogen is attachment to the host epi...
AbstractThe first step in the encounter between a host and a pathogen is attachment to the host epit...
AbstractSurface organelles (so-called pili) expressed on the bacterial membrane mediate the adhesion...
Many infection processes start with primary adhesion of pathogenic bacteria to host cells. The Gram-...
AbstractThe mechanical behavior of individual P pili of uropathogenic Escherichia coli has been inve...
Pili produced by Lactococcus lactis subsp. lactis are putative linear structures consisting of repet...
We are grateful to Birgitta Henriques-Normark for providing the strains and to Bernt Eric Uhlin and ...
Type 1 fimbriae mediate adhesion of uropathogenic Escherichia coli to host cells. It has been hypoth...
Bacterial resistance to antibiotics is increasing at a high rate in both developing and developed co...
International audienceS pili are members of the chaperone-usher-pathway-assembled pili family that a...
Adhesion pili assembled by the chaperone-usher pathway are superelastic helical filaments on the sur...
A variety of bacterial pathogens use nanoscale protein fibers called type IV pili to mediate cell ad...