Abstract

Many members of the phylum Bacteroidota (formerly called Bacteroidetes) adhere to and move on solid surfaces. This type of bacterial motility is called gliding and does not involve the conventional bacterial motility machinery, such as flagella and pili. To understand the mechanism of gliding motility of some Bacteroidota bacteria such as a soil bacterium Flavobacterium johnsoniae and a marine bacterium Saprospira grandis, the gliding motility machines of these two bacteria have been analyzed by electron microscopy with negative staining. Here, we describe methods to directly observe the gliding motility machinery in Bacteroidota by transmission electron microscopy.

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