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Journal of Bacteriology, February 1999, p. 884-892, Vol. 181, No. 3
Department of
Microbiology1 and
School of Biochemistry
and Molecular Biology,2 University of Leeds,
Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom
Received 8 July 1998/Accepted 23 November 1998
The cell walls of a number of filamentous, gliding cyanobacteria of
the genus Oscillatoria were examined by transmission
electron microscopy of ultrathin sections, of freeze-etched replicas,
and of whole cells crushed between glass slides and negatively stained. All three techniques revealed the presence of a highly ordered array of
parallel fibrils, seen in transverse sections to be situated between
the peptidoglycan and the outer membrane. Approximately 200 individual
fibrils, each 25 to 30 nm in width, form a parallel, helical array that
completely surrounds each cyanobacterial filament, running at an angle
of 25 to 30° to its long axis. This highly regular arrangement of the
fibrillar layer may imply some underlying symmetry responsible for its
organization. A possible source of such symmetry would be the
peptidoglycan, and some form of interaction between this layer and the
fibrils might provide the necessary scaffolding for the fibrillar
array. In crushed, negatively stained samples of fresh cells,
individual fibrils were seen outside the filament, released from the
cell wall. These released fibrils were of the same width as those
observed in situ but were in short lengths, mostly of 100 to 200 nm,
and were invariably bent, sometimes even into U shapes, implying great
flexibility. Negative staining of released fibrils showed no evidence
that they were hollow tubes but did give some indication of a
substructure, implying that they were composed of many subunits. The
function of this fibrillar array is unknown, although its position in
the cell wall, as well as the correspondence between the angle of the
fibrils with respect to the long axis of the filament and the rotation
of the filament during gliding, may imply an involvement in gliding motility.
0021-9193/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Fibrillar Array in the Cell Wall of a Gliding
Filamentous Cyanobacterium
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Microbiology, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom.
Phone: (44) 0113-2335588. Fax: (44) 0113-2335638. E-mail:
d.g.adams{at}leeds.ac.uk.
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