Mycoplasma mobile forms gliding machinery at a cell pole and glides continuously in the direction of the cell pole at up to 4.5μm per second on solid surfaces such as animal cells. This motility system is not related to those of any other bacteria or eukaryotes. M. mobile uses ATP energy to repeatedly catch, pull, and release sialylated oligosaccharides on host cells with its approximately 50-nm long legs. The gliding machinery is a large structure composed of huge surface proteins and internal jellyfish-like structure. This system may have developed from an accidental combination between an adhesin and a rotary ATPase, both of which are essential for the adhesive parasitic life of Mycoplasmas
Mycoplasma pneumoniae, a human pathogenic bacterium, binds to sialylated oligosaccharides and glides...
AbstractMycoplasmas exhibit a novel, substrate-dependent gliding motility that is driven by ∼400 “le...
AbstractAn important group of animal and human pathogens, belonging to the phylum Apicomplexa, emplo...
Mycoplasma mobile forms gliding machinery at a cell pole and glides continuously in the direction of...
Mycoplasma mobile forms gliding machinery at a cell pole and glides continuously in the direction of...
Mycoplasma mobile forms gliding machinery at a cell pole and glides continuously in the direction of...
ABSTRACT Mycoplasma mobile, a fish pathogen, glides on solid surfaces by repeated catch, pull, and r...
Mycoplasma mobile glides on solid surfaces by the repeated binding of leg structures to sialylated o...
Mycoplasma mobile has a unique mechanism that enables it to glide on solid surfaces faster than any ...
ABSTRACT Mycoplasma mobile, a fish-pathogenic bacterium, features a protrusion that enables it to gl...
Mycoplasma mobile, a fish-pathogenic bacterium, features a protrusion that enables it to glide smoot...
The binding and gliding ofMycoplasma mobile on a plastic plate covered by 53 uniform oligosaccharide...
Mycoplasma mobile is a bacterium that uses a unique mechanism to glide on solid surfaces at a veloci...
Mycoplasma mobile has a flask-shaped cell morphology and glides toward its tapered end at a rate of ...
International audienceMycoplasma gallisepticum, the most pathogenic mycoplasma in poultry, is able t...
Mycoplasma pneumoniae, a human pathogenic bacterium, binds to sialylated oligosaccharides and glides...
AbstractMycoplasmas exhibit a novel, substrate-dependent gliding motility that is driven by ∼400 “le...
AbstractAn important group of animal and human pathogens, belonging to the phylum Apicomplexa, emplo...
Mycoplasma mobile forms gliding machinery at a cell pole and glides continuously in the direction of...
Mycoplasma mobile forms gliding machinery at a cell pole and glides continuously in the direction of...
Mycoplasma mobile forms gliding machinery at a cell pole and glides continuously in the direction of...
ABSTRACT Mycoplasma mobile, a fish pathogen, glides on solid surfaces by repeated catch, pull, and r...
Mycoplasma mobile glides on solid surfaces by the repeated binding of leg structures to sialylated o...
Mycoplasma mobile has a unique mechanism that enables it to glide on solid surfaces faster than any ...
ABSTRACT Mycoplasma mobile, a fish-pathogenic bacterium, features a protrusion that enables it to gl...
Mycoplasma mobile, a fish-pathogenic bacterium, features a protrusion that enables it to glide smoot...
The binding and gliding ofMycoplasma mobile on a plastic plate covered by 53 uniform oligosaccharide...
Mycoplasma mobile is a bacterium that uses a unique mechanism to glide on solid surfaces at a veloci...
Mycoplasma mobile has a flask-shaped cell morphology and glides toward its tapered end at a rate of ...
International audienceMycoplasma gallisepticum, the most pathogenic mycoplasma in poultry, is able t...
Mycoplasma pneumoniae, a human pathogenic bacterium, binds to sialylated oligosaccharides and glides...
AbstractMycoplasmas exhibit a novel, substrate-dependent gliding motility that is driven by ∼400 “le...
AbstractAn important group of animal and human pathogens, belonging to the phylum Apicomplexa, emplo...