Filamentous Desulfobulbaceae bacteria were recently discovered as long-range transporters of electrons from
sulphide to oxygen in marine sediments. The long-range electron transfer through these “cable bacteria” has
created considerable interests, but it has also raised many questions, such as what structural basis will be
required to enable micrometer-sized cells to build into centimeter-long continuous filaments? Here we
dissected cable bacteria cells in vitro by atomic force microscopy and further explored the interior, which is
normally hidden behind the outer membrane (OM). Using nanoscale topographical and mechanical maps,
different types of bacterial cell-cell junctions and strings along the cable length were identified. More
importantly: these strings were found to be continuous along the bacterial cells passing through the cell-cell
junctions. This indicates that the strings serve an important function in maintaining integrity of individual cable
bacteria cells as a united filament. Furthermore, ridges in the OM are found to envelop the individual strings at
cell-cell junctions, and they are proposed to strengthen the cell-cell junctions. Finally, we propose a model for
the division and growth of the cable bacteria, which illustrate the possible structural requirements for the
formation of centimeter length filaments in the recently discovered cable bacteria.
Revised: August 26, 2019 |
Published: August 21, 2018
Citation
Jiang Z., S. Zhang, L. Hyldgaard Klausen, J. Song, Q. Li, Z. Wang, and B. Torger Stokke, et al. 2018.In vitro single-cell dissection revealing the interior structure of cable bacteria.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) 115, no. 34:8517-8522.PNNL-SA-136014.doi:10.1073/pnas.1807562115