Bacteriophage viruses, one of the most abundant entities in our planet, lack the ability to move independently. Instead, they crowd fluid environments in anticipation of a random encounter with a bacterium. Once they ‘land’ on the cell body of their victim, they are able to eject their genetic material inside the host cell. Many phage species, however, first attach to the flagellar filaments of bacteria. Being immotile, these so-called flagellotropic phages still manage to reach the cell body for infection, and the process by which they move up the flagellar filament has intrigued the scientific community for decades. In 1973, Berg and Anderson (Nature, 245, 380-382) proposed the nut-and-bolt mechanism in which, similarly to a rotated nut t...
Swimming bacteria with helical flagella are self-propelled micro-swimmers in nature, and the swimmin...
Coexistence of bacteriophages, or phages, and their host bacteria plays an important role in maintai...
AbstractTo study the swimming of a peritrichous bacterium such as Escherichia coli, which is able to...
The ‘nut-and-bolt’ mechanism of a bacteriophage-bacteria flagellum translocation motion is modelled ...
AbstractThe bacterial flagellum is a self-assembling filament, which bacteria use for swimming. It i...
Flagellotropic bacteriophages engage flagella to reach the bacterial surface as an effective means t...
The evolution of molecular machines is fundamental to the development of pathogenesis in bacteria. T...
Flagellotropic bacteriophages engage flagella to reach the bacterial surface as an effective means t...
Most bacteria swim in liquid environments by rotating one or several flagella. The long external fil...
Microscopic-scale swimming has been a very active area of research in the last couple of decades. Th...
The bacterial flagellum is an amazingly complex molecular machine with a diversity of roles in patho...
Most bacteria swim in liquid environments by rotating one or several flagella. The long external fil...
Cargo trafficking along microtubules is exploited by eukaryotic viruses, but no such examples have b...
A crucial structure in the motility of flagellated bacteria is the hook, which connects the flagellu...
International audienceFilamentous phages are nonlytic viruses that specifically infect bacteria, est...
Swimming bacteria with helical flagella are self-propelled micro-swimmers in nature, and the swimmin...
Coexistence of bacteriophages, or phages, and their host bacteria plays an important role in maintai...
AbstractTo study the swimming of a peritrichous bacterium such as Escherichia coli, which is able to...
The ‘nut-and-bolt’ mechanism of a bacteriophage-bacteria flagellum translocation motion is modelled ...
AbstractThe bacterial flagellum is a self-assembling filament, which bacteria use for swimming. It i...
Flagellotropic bacteriophages engage flagella to reach the bacterial surface as an effective means t...
The evolution of molecular machines is fundamental to the development of pathogenesis in bacteria. T...
Flagellotropic bacteriophages engage flagella to reach the bacterial surface as an effective means t...
Most bacteria swim in liquid environments by rotating one or several flagella. The long external fil...
Microscopic-scale swimming has been a very active area of research in the last couple of decades. Th...
The bacterial flagellum is an amazingly complex molecular machine with a diversity of roles in patho...
Most bacteria swim in liquid environments by rotating one or several flagella. The long external fil...
Cargo trafficking along microtubules is exploited by eukaryotic viruses, but no such examples have b...
A crucial structure in the motility of flagellated bacteria is the hook, which connects the flagellu...
International audienceFilamentous phages are nonlytic viruses that specifically infect bacteria, est...
Swimming bacteria with helical flagella are self-propelled micro-swimmers in nature, and the swimmin...
Coexistence of bacteriophages, or phages, and their host bacteria plays an important role in maintai...
AbstractTo study the swimming of a peritrichous bacterium such as Escherichia coli, which is able to...