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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Regulation of flagellar motility during biofilm formation

Sarah B. Guttenplan, +1 more
- 01 Nov 2013 - 
- Vol. 37, Iss: 6, pp 849-871
TLDR
The regulation of motility during biofilm formation in Bacillus, Pseudomonas, Vibrio, and Escherichia is reviewed, and it is concluded that the motility-to-biofilm transition, if necessary, likely involves two steps.
Abstract
Many bacteria swim in liquid or swarm over solid surfaces by synthesizing rotary flagella The same bacteria that are motile also commonly form nonmotile multicellular aggregates called biofilms Biofilms are an important part of the lifestyle of pathogenic bacteria, and it is assumed that there is a motility-to-biofilm transition wherein the inhibition of motility promotes biofilm formation The transition is largely inferred from regulatory mutants that reveal the opposite regulation of the two phenotypes Here, we review the regulation of motility during biofilm formation in Bacillus, Pseudomonas, Vibrio, and Escherichia, and we conclude that the motility-to-biofilm transition, if necessary, likely involves two steps In the short term, flagella are functionally regulated to either inhibit rotation or modulate the basal flagellar reversal frequency Over the long term, flagellar gene transcription is inhibited and in the absence of de novo synthesis, flagella are diluted to extinction through growth Both short-term and long-term motility inhibition is likely important to stabilize cell aggregates and optimize resource investment We emphasize the newly discovered flagellar functional regulators and speculate that others await discovery in the context of biofilm formation

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Citations
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Beyond Risk: Bacterial Biofilms and Their Regulating Approaches.

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Biofilms, flagella, and mechanosensing of surfaces by bacteria

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The flagellum in bacterial pathogens: For motility and a whole lot more

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Type III secretion systems: the bacterial flagellum and the injectisome

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Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic analysis of Escherichia coli biofilm formation: roles of flagella, motility, chemotaxis and type I pili

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