Horizontal gene transfer of the functional archaellum machinery to bacteria

Published: 21 August 2025| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/9999vt8h6h.1
Contributor:
Najwa TAIB

Description

Motility in archaea is driven by a nanomachinery called the archaellum. So far archaella have been exclusively described for the archaeal domain, however, a recent study reported the presence of archaellum gene clusters in bacterial strains of the SAR202 clade (Chloroflexota). Here, we show that bona fide archaellum gene clusters are widespread in several members of the Chloroflexota, which in turn lack any bacterial flagellar components. Analysis of archaellum encoding loci and predicted structures show remarkable similarity to the archaellum machinery. Moreover, using cryoEM SPA we solve the first structure of the archaellum from Litorilinea aerophila, demonstrating the successful expression and assembly of this machinery in bacteria (and its role in motility?). Finally, phylogenomic analysis reveals two horizontal gene transfer events from euryarchaeal members to Chloroflexota. In summary, our study demonstrate that a functional and assembled archaellum machinery can be successfully exchanged between the two prokaryotic domains.

Files

Categories

Microbiology, Phylogenetics, Phylogenomics

Licence