The bacterial flagellar apparatus, which involves ∼40 different proteins, has been a model system for understanding motility and chemotaxis. The bacterial flagellar filament, largely composed of a single protein, flagellin, has been a model for understanding protein assembly. This system has no homology to the eukaryotic flagellum, in which the filament alone, composed of a microtubule-based axoneme, contains more than 400 different proteins. The archaeal flagellar system is simpler still, in some cases having ∼13 different proteins with a single flagellar filament protein. The archaeal flagellar system has no homology to the bacterial one and must have arisen by convergent evolution. However, it has been understood that the N-terminal doma...
International audienceCilia and flagella are complex organelles composed of up to 500 proteins. We h...
Most secreted archaeal proteins are targeted to the membrane via a tripartite signal composed of a c...
Flagellation in archaea is widespread and is involved in swimming motility. Here, we demonstrate tha...
The bacterial flagellar apparatus, which involves similar to 40 different proteins, has been a model...
Many Archaea use rotation of helical flagellar filaments for swimming motility. We isolated and char...
Bacterial type IV pili perform important functions in such disparate biological processes as surface...
Flagella, the primary means of motility in bacteria, are helical filaments that function as microsco...
International audienceBackground: As bacteria, motile archaeal species swim by means of rotating fla...
The archaeal flagellum is a unique motility apparatus in the prokaryotic domain, distinct from the b...
Flagella, the primary means of motility in bacteria, are helical filaments that function as microsco...
AbstractThe chemotaxis of bacteria such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli involves smooth swimming ...
Swimming motility is a process that allows microorganisms to seek favorable conditions and escape to...
AbstractThe bacterial flagellum is an example of elegance in molecular engineering. Flagella depende...
The archaellum is the macromolecular machinery that Archaea use for propulsion or surface adhesion, ...
Background: Archaea share with bacteria the ability to bias their movement towards more favorable lo...
International audienceCilia and flagella are complex organelles composed of up to 500 proteins. We h...
Most secreted archaeal proteins are targeted to the membrane via a tripartite signal composed of a c...
Flagellation in archaea is widespread and is involved in swimming motility. Here, we demonstrate tha...
The bacterial flagellar apparatus, which involves similar to 40 different proteins, has been a model...
Many Archaea use rotation of helical flagellar filaments for swimming motility. We isolated and char...
Bacterial type IV pili perform important functions in such disparate biological processes as surface...
Flagella, the primary means of motility in bacteria, are helical filaments that function as microsco...
International audienceBackground: As bacteria, motile archaeal species swim by means of rotating fla...
The archaeal flagellum is a unique motility apparatus in the prokaryotic domain, distinct from the b...
Flagella, the primary means of motility in bacteria, are helical filaments that function as microsco...
AbstractThe chemotaxis of bacteria such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli involves smooth swimming ...
Swimming motility is a process that allows microorganisms to seek favorable conditions and escape to...
AbstractThe bacterial flagellum is an example of elegance in molecular engineering. Flagella depende...
The archaellum is the macromolecular machinery that Archaea use for propulsion or surface adhesion, ...
Background: Archaea share with bacteria the ability to bias their movement towards more favorable lo...
International audienceCilia and flagella are complex organelles composed of up to 500 proteins. We h...
Most secreted archaeal proteins are targeted to the membrane via a tripartite signal composed of a c...
Flagellation in archaea is widespread and is involved in swimming motility. Here, we demonstrate tha...