Abstract

Many kinds of peritrichous bacteria that repeat runs and tumbles by using multiple flagella exhibit chemotaxis by sensing a difference in the concentration of the attractant or repellent between two adjacent time points. If a cell senses that the concentration of an attractant has increased, their flagellar motors decrease the switching frequency from counterclockwise to clockwise direction of rotation, which causes a longer run in swimming up the concentration gradient than swimming down. We investigated the turn angle in tumbles of peritrichous bacteria swimming across the concentration gradient of a chemoattractant because the change in the switching frequency in the rotational direction may affect the way tumbles. We tracked several hundreds of runs and tumbles of single cells of Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium in the concentration gradient of L-serine and found that the turn angle depends on the concentration gradient that the cell senses just before the tumble. The turn angle is biased toward a smaller value when the cells swim up the concentration gradient, whereas the distribution of the angle is almost uniform (random direction) when the cells swim down the gradient. The effect of the observed bias in the turn angle on the degree of chemotaxis was investigated by random walk simulation. In the concentration field where attractants diffuse concentrically from the point source, we found that this angular distribution clearly affects the reduction of the mean-square displacement of the cell that has started at the attractant source, that is, the bias in the turn angle distribution contributes to chemotaxis in peritrichous bacteria.

Highlights

  • IntroductionMany kinds of bacteria exhibit chemotaxis; the cells accumulate around a favorable substance (attractant) or recede from an unfavorable one (repellent)

  • Many kinds of bacteria exhibit chemotaxis; the cells accumulate around a favorable substance or recede from an unfavorable one

  • Chemotactic behaviors in peritrichous bacteria were predicted to be observed at the turn angles during tumbles motion as well as at the duration of runs; smaller changes in the swimming direction of cells swimming up the attractant’s gradient can be observed. This behavior is appropriate because the nature of bacterial chemotaxis changes the switching rate of the rotational direction of the flagellar motors according to the environment

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Summary

Introduction

Many kinds of bacteria exhibit chemotaxis; the cells accumulate around a favorable substance (attractant) or recede from an unfavorable one (repellent). Cells swim by rotating the helical flagella with the help of flagellar motors located at the proximal ends of the flagella. When each motor rotates counterclockwise (CCW), when observed from the distal end of the flagellum to the motor, the flagella form a bundle, and the cell propels itself (run). When the rotational direction of the motors switches to clockwise (CW), the corresponding flagella are released from the bundle and the swimming direction of the cell changes (tumble) [4,5,6]. For E. coli cells, the mean time durations of run and tumble movements are $1 and 0.1 s, respectively [7]

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