Sulfolobus acidocaldarius adhesion pili power twitching motility in the absence of a dedicated retraction ATPase.
Arthur Charles-OrszagMarleen van WolferenSamuel J LordSonja-Verena AlbersR Dyche MullinsPublished in: bioRxiv : the preprint server for biology (2023)
Type IV pili are ancient and widespread filamentous organelles found in most bacterial and archaeal phyla where they support a wide range of functions, including substrate adhesion, DNA uptake, self aggregation, and cell motility. In most bacteria, PilT-family ATPases disassemble adhesion pili, causing them to rapidly retract and produce twitching motility, important for surface colonization. As archaea do not possess homologs of PilT, it was thought that archaeal pili cannot retract. Here, we employ live-cell imaging under native conditions (75°C and pH 2), together with automated single-cell tracking, high-temperature fluorescence imaging, and genetic manipulation to demonstrate that S. acidocaldarius exhibits bona fide twitching motility, and that this behavior depends specifically on retractable adhesion pili. Our results demonstrate that archaeal adhesion pili are capable of retraction in the absence of a PilT retraction ATPase and suggests that the ancestral type IV pilus machinery in the last universal common ancestor (LUCA) relied on such a bifunctional ATPase for both extension and retraction.
Keyphrases
- biofilm formation
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- staphylococcus aureus
- single cell
- fluorescence imaging
- candida albicans
- escherichia coli
- high temperature
- high throughput
- high resolution
- machine learning
- photodynamic therapy
- rna seq
- deep learning
- cell adhesion
- endoplasmic reticulum
- single molecule
- circulating tumor
- gene expression
- cell therapy
- bone marrow
- mass spectrometry
- dna methylation
- metal organic framework