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Positioning the Flagellum at the Center of a Dividing Cell To Combine Bacterial Division with Magnetic Polarity

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TLDR
In this article, it was shown that a new flagellum can be synthesized at the division site of a Gammaproteobacteria to solve the problem that if the old pole is empty during cell division, the two daughter cells will have opposite magnetic polarities with respect to the positions of their flagella.
Abstract
Faithful replication of all structural features is a sine qua non condition for the success of bacterial reproduction by binary fission. For some species, a key challenge is to replicate and organize structures with multiple polarities. Polarly flagellated magnetotactic bacteria are the prime example of organisms dealing with such a dichotomy; they have the challenge of bequeathing two types of polarities to their daughter cells: magnetic and flagellar polarities. Indeed, these microorganisms align and move in the Earth's magnetic field using an intracellular chain of nano-magnets that imparts a magnetic dipole to the cell. The paradox is that, after division occurs in cells, if the new flagellum is positioned opposite to the old pole devoid of a flagellum during cell division, the two daughter cells will have opposite magnetic polarities with respect to the positions of their flagella. Here we show that magnetotactic bacteria of the class Gammaproteobacteria pragmatically solve this problem by synthesizing a new flagellum at the division site. In addition, we model this particular structural inheritance during cell division. This finding opens up new questions regarding the molecular aspects of the new division mechanism, the way other polarly flagellated magnetotactic bacteria control the rotational direction of their flagella, and the positioning of organelles.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial Cell Division: Nonmodels Poised to Take the Spotlight.

TL;DR: This review of research using understudied organisms, or nonmodel systems, has revealed several alternate mechanistic strategies that bacteria use to divide and propagate and compares these strategies to cell division mechanisms elucidated in model organisms.
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Swimming with magnets: From biological organisms to synthetic devices

TL;DR: The field of the magnetic microswimmers is reviewed, which as indicated by the adjective, represents a dedicated branch of the general microswimming where magnetism plays a role either for the orientation or for the locomotion of the swimmers.
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Magnetoreception in Microorganisms.

TL;DR: Recent discoveries have demonstrated the existence of unicellular eukaryotes able to sense the geomagnetic field, and have revealed different mechanisms and strategies involved in such a sensing.
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Magnetotactic bacteria - Magnetic navigation on the microscale

TL;DR: Magnetotactic bacteria are aquatic microorganisms with the ability to swim along the field lines of a magnetic field, which in their natural environment is provided by the magnetic field of the Earth.
References
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Book

Biology of microorganisms

TL;DR: Biology of microorganisms, Biology of micro organisms, مرکز فناوری اطلاعات و اصاع رسانی, کδاوρزی
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Magnetosome formation in prokaryotes

TL;DR: Progress has been made in elucidating the molecular, biochemical, chemical and genetic bases of magnetosome formation and understanding how these unique intracellular organelles function.
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Rapid pole-to-pole oscillation of a protein required for directing division to the middle of Escherichia coli.

TL;DR: It is shown that functional Gfp-MinD accumulates alternately in either one of the cell halves in what appears to be a rapidly oscillating membrane association-dissociation cycle imposed by MinE.
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MipZ, a Spatial Regulator Coordinating Chromosome Segregation with Cell Division in Caulobacter

TL;DR: A mechanism that coordinates assembly and placement of the FtsZ cytokinetic ring with bipolar localization of the newly duplicated chromosomal origins in Caulobacter is presented.
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