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© Research
Publication : Nature microbiology

Structure of a functional archaellum in Bacteria of the Chloroflexota phylum.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Nature microbiology - 17 Sep 2025

Sivabalasarma S, Taib N, Mollat CL, Joest M, Steimle S, Gribaldo S, Albers SV

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 40962902

Link to DOI – 10.1038/s41564-025-02110-8

Nat Microbiol 2025 Sep; ():

Motility in Archaea is driven by the archaellum, a rotary ATP-driven machinery unrelated to the bacterial flagellum. To date, archaella have been described exclusively in archaea; however, recent work reported archaellum genes in bacterial strains of the SAR202 clade (Chloroflexota). Here, using MacSyFinder, we show that bona fide archaellum gene clusters are widespread in several members of the Chloroflexota. Analysis of archaellum-encoding loci and Alphafold3-predicted structures show similarity to the archaellum machinery. Using cryo electron microscopy single-particle analysis, we solved the structure of the bacterial archaellum from Litorilinea aerophila to 2.7 Å. We also show the expression and assembly of this machinery in bacteria and its function in swimming motility. Finally, a phylogenomic analysis revealed two horizontal gene transfer events from euryarchaeal members to Chloroflexota. In summary, our study shows that a functional and assembled archaellum machinery can be exchanged between the two prokaryotic domains.