AbstractThe corkscrew-like flagellar filaments emerging from the surface of bacteria such as Salmonella typhimurium propel the cells toward nutrient and away from repellents. This kind of motility depends upon the ability of the flagellar filaments to adopt a range of distinct helical forms. A filament is typically constructed from ~30,000 identical flagellin molecules, which self-assemble into a tubular structure containing 11 near-longitudinal protofilaments. A “mechanical” model, in which the flagellin building block has the capacity to switch between two principal interfacial states, predicts that the filament can assemble into a “canonical” family of 12 distinct helical forms, each having unique curvature and twist: these include two “...
Abstract: Many species of bacteria swim through viscous environments by rotating multiple helical fl...
The bacterial flagellum is a large molecular complex composed of thousands of protein subunits for m...
Flagella, the primary means of motility in bacteria, are helical filaments that function as microsco...
AbstractThe corkscrew-like flagellar filaments emerging from the surface of bacteria such as Salmone...
AbstractMany types of bacteria propel themselves using elongated structures known as flagella. The b...
Flagellar filaments function as the propellers of the bacterial flagellum and their supercoiling is ...
AbstractThe chemotaxis of bacteria such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli involves smooth swimming ...
AbstractBacterial flagella can adopt several different helical shapes in response to varying environ...
Bacterial flagella are helical proteinaceous fibers, composed of the protein flagellin, that confer ...
The bacterial flagellum is a remarkable molecular motor, whose primary function in bacteria is to fa...
AbstractThe flagellar filament, the bacterial organelle of motility, is the smallest rotary propelle...
Bacterial flagellar filaments are assembled by tens of thousands flagellin subunits, forming 11 heli...
Bacterial mobility is powered by rotation of helical flagellar filaments driven by rotary motors. Fl...
AbstractThe bacterial flagellum is an example of elegance in molecular engineering. Flagella depende...
AbstractCertain motile bacteria employ rotating flagella for propulsion. The relative flexibility of...
Abstract: Many species of bacteria swim through viscous environments by rotating multiple helical fl...
The bacterial flagellum is a large molecular complex composed of thousands of protein subunits for m...
Flagella, the primary means of motility in bacteria, are helical filaments that function as microsco...
AbstractThe corkscrew-like flagellar filaments emerging from the surface of bacteria such as Salmone...
AbstractMany types of bacteria propel themselves using elongated structures known as flagella. The b...
Flagellar filaments function as the propellers of the bacterial flagellum and their supercoiling is ...
AbstractThe chemotaxis of bacteria such as Salmonella and Escherichia coli involves smooth swimming ...
AbstractBacterial flagella can adopt several different helical shapes in response to varying environ...
Bacterial flagella are helical proteinaceous fibers, composed of the protein flagellin, that confer ...
The bacterial flagellum is a remarkable molecular motor, whose primary function in bacteria is to fa...
AbstractThe flagellar filament, the bacterial organelle of motility, is the smallest rotary propelle...
Bacterial flagellar filaments are assembled by tens of thousands flagellin subunits, forming 11 heli...
Bacterial mobility is powered by rotation of helical flagellar filaments driven by rotary motors. Fl...
AbstractThe bacterial flagellum is an example of elegance in molecular engineering. Flagella depende...
AbstractCertain motile bacteria employ rotating flagella for propulsion. The relative flexibility of...
Abstract: Many species of bacteria swim through viscous environments by rotating multiple helical fl...
The bacterial flagellum is a large molecular complex composed of thousands of protein subunits for m...
Flagella, the primary means of motility in bacteria, are helical filaments that function as microsco...