@article{oai:kyutech.repo.nii.ac.jp:00006484, author = {Sakai, Tomofumi and Miyata, Tomoko and Terahara, Naoya and Mori, Koichiro and Inoue, Yumi and Morimoto, Yusuke V. and 森本, 雄祐 and Kato, Takayuki and Namba, Keiichi and Minamino, Tohru}, issue = {2}, journal = {mBio}, month = {Apr}, note = {The flagellar motor can spin in both counterclockwise (CCW) and clockwise (CW) directions. The flagellar motor consists of a rotor and multiple stator units, which act as a proton channel. The rotor is composed of the transmembrane MS ring made of FliF and the cytoplasmic C ring consisting of FliG, FliM, and FliN. The C ring is directly involved in rotation and directional switching. The Salmonella FliF-FliG deletion fusion motor missing 56 residues from the C terminus of FliF and 94 residues from the N terminus of FliG keeps a domain responsible for the interaction with the stator intact, but its motor function is reduced significantly. Here, we report the structure and function of the FliF-FliG deletion fusion motor. The FliF-FliG deletion fusion not only resulted in a strong CW switch bias but also affected rotor-stator interactions coupled with proton translocation through the proton channel of the stator unit. The energy coupling efficiency of the deletion fusion motor was the same as that of the wild-type motor. Extragenic suppressor mutations in FliG, FliM, or FliN not only relieved the strong CW switch bias but also increased the motor speed at low load. The FliF-FliG deletion fusion made intersubunit interactions between C ring proteins tighter compared to the wild-type motor, whereas the suppressor mutations affect such tighter intersubunit interactions. We propose that a change of intersubunit interactions between the C ring proteins may be required for high-speed motor rotation as well as direction switching.}, pages = {e00079-19-1--e00079-19-14}, title = {Novel Insights into Conformational Rearrangements of the Bacterial Flagellar Switch Complex}, volume = {10}, year = {2019}, yomi = {モリモト, ユウスケ} }