2003
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0535335100
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Type III secretion systems and bacterial flagella: Insights into their function from structural similarities

Abstract: Type III secretion systems and bacterial flagella are broadly compared at the level of their genetic structure, morphology, regulation, and function, integrating structural information, to provide an overview of how they might function at a molecular level.

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Cited by 270 publications
(241 citation statements)
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“…Its original role as a secretion apparatus is also supported by the clear links between the flagellum and the TTSS, a protein delivery system whose genetic architecture is similar to and derived from a flagellar gene complex (17,20). Although some bacterial genomes contain recent paralogs of particular flagellar genes, most flagellar genes originated very early and are highly divergent, which occasionally hampers the recognition of orthologs, or the similarity between core proteins, in some of the genomes that we considered.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Its original role as a secretion apparatus is also supported by the clear links between the flagellum and the TTSS, a protein delivery system whose genetic architecture is similar to and derived from a flagellar gene complex (17,20). Although some bacterial genomes contain recent paralogs of particular flagellar genes, most flagellar genes originated very early and are highly divergent, which occasionally hampers the recognition of orthologs, or the similarity between core proteins, in some of the genomes that we considered.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because the flagellar motor proteins MotA/B are homologous to the motor proteins in the Tol-pal and TonB systems (15), the flagellum was hypothesized to have originated as a simple proton-driven secretion system (16). Most significantly, there are well established sequence and structural homologies between bacterial flagella and the type III secretion system (TTSS) demonstrating that the two apparati derive from a common ancestor (17). Most evidence, including their much broader phylogenetic distribution, supports the view that the flagellum arose much earlier that the TTSS, which are largely limited to Proteobacteria (18)(19)(20).…”
Section: Stepwise Formation Of the Bacterial Flagellar Systemmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The bacterial injectisome (or needle complex) is structurally similar to the flagellum and consists of a basal body-like structure, an associated T3SS, and a hollow needle-like filament that protrudes from the cell surface and serves as the conduit through which proteins are secreted [18]. Much like the flagellum, assembly of the injectisome is thought to proceed in a sequential manner starting with formation of a basal structure and ending with T3SS-dependent export of the needle protein to the distal tip [4].…”
Section: Secretory Activity As An Inducing Signal In the Injectisome mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This apparatus is related to the injectisome used by many gram-negative pathogens and symbionts to transfer effector proteins into host cells; in both systems this export mechanism is termed 'type III' secretion 2,3 . The flagellar secretion apparatus comprises a membrane-embedded complex of about five proteins, and soluble factors, which include export-dedicated chaperones and an ATPase, FliI, that was thought to provide the energy for export 1,4 .…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%