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Involvement of ArlI, ArlJ, and CirA in archaeal type IV pilin-mediated motility regulation

Priyanka Chatterjee, Marco A. Garcia, Jacob A. Cote,Kun Yun,Georgio P. Legerme, Rumi Habib,Manuela Tripepi,Criston Young,Daniel Kulp,Mike Dyall-Smith,Mecky Pohlschroder

Journal of Bacteriology(2024)

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Abstract
Many prokaryotes use swimming motility to move toward favorable conditions and escape adverse surroundings. Regulatory mechanisms governing bacterial flagella-driven motility are well-established; however, little is yet known about the regulation underlying swimming motility propelled by the archaeal cell surface structure, the archaella. Previous research showed that the deletion of the adhesion pilins (PilA1-6), subunits of the type IV pili cell surface structure, renders the model archaeon Haloferax volcanii non-motile. In this study, we used ethyl methanesulfonate mutagenesis and a motility assay to identify motile suppressors of the triangle pilA[1-6] strain. Of the eight suppressors identified, six contain missense mutations in archaella biosynthesis genes, arlI and arlJ. In trans expression of arlI and arlJ mutant constructs in the respective multi-deletion strains triangle pilA[1-6]triangle arlI and triangle pilA[1-6]triangle arlJ confirmed their role in suppressing the triangle pilA[1-6] motility defect. Additionally, three suppressors harbor co-occurring disruptive missense and nonsense mutations in cirA, a gene encoding a proposed regulatory protein. A deletion of cirA resulted in hypermotility, while cirA expression in trans in wild-type cells led to decreased motility. Moreover, quantitative real-time PCR analysis revealed that in wild-type cells, higher expression levels of arlI, arlJ, and the archaellin gene arlA1 were observed in motile early-log phase rod-shaped cells compared to non-motile mid-log phase disk-shaped cells. Conversely, triangle cirA cells, which form rods during both early- and mid-log phases, exhibited similar expression levels of arl genes in both growth phases. Our findings contribute to a deeper understanding of the mechanisms governing archaeal motility, highlighting the involvement of ArlI, ArlJ, and CirA in pilin-mediated motility regulation.
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Key words
archaea,archaella,motility regulation,type IV pili,cell shape,swimming motility,Haloferax,circadian
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