Author
Bai, F
Branch, R
Nicolau, D
Pilizota, T
Steel, B
Maini, P
Berry, R
Journal title
Science
DOI
10.1126/science.1182105
Issue
5966
Volume
327
Last updated
2026-01-26T22:52:18.397+00:00
Page
685-689
Abstract
The bacterial flagellar switch that controls the direction of flagellar rotation during chemotaxis has a highly cooperative response. This has previously been understood in terms of the classic two-state, concerted model of allosteric regulation. Here, we used high-resolution optical microscopy to observe switching of single motors and uncover the stochastic multistate nature of the switch. Our observations are in detailed quantitative agreement with a recent general model of allosteric cooperativity that exhibits conformational spread--the stochastic growth and shrinkage of domains of adjacent subunits sharing a particular conformational state. We expect that conformational spread will be important in explaining cooperativity in other large signaling complexes.
Symplectic ID
48472
Download URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20133571
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Publication type
Journal Article
Publication date
05 Feb 2010
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