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Published November 12, 1993 | public
Journal Article

An Archimedian Spiral: The Basal Disk of the Wolinella Flagellar Motor

Abstract

The motor that powers the rotation of the bacterial flagellum reaches through both membranes into the cytoplasm of Gram-negative bacteria. The flagellum is connected by a flexible link (hook) to the motor axis, which passes through the center of a structure called the basal disk. The basal disk functions with the L-P ring complex as a bushing, enabling the rotation of the motor in the cell wall. The protein subunits of the basal disk of Wolinella succinogenes form an Archimedian spiral. The polymerization of subunits from a nucleation point at the motor in the form of a spiral allows constant growth of the basal disk. The disk is thought to provide a reinforcement at the flagellar insertion at the cell pole and to disperse forces that are generated by the momentum of the flagellar rotation.

Additional Information

© 1993 American Association for the Advancement of Science. 28 July 1993; Accepted 17 September 1993. H.E. and S.C.S. contributed equally to this study. Supported by a research grant to E.B. from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft.

Additional details

Created:
August 20, 2023
Modified:
February 9, 2024