flagellum
(noun)
In protists, a long, whiplike membrane-enclosed organelle used for locomotion or feeding.
Examples of flagellum in the following topics:
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Opisthokonts: Animals and Fungi
- One common characteristic of opisthokonts is that flagellate cells, such as most animal sperm and chytrid spores, propel themselves with a single posterior flagellum .
- Most fungi do not produce cells with flagellae, but the primitive fungal chytrids do, suggesting that a common ancestor of current fungal species did have a flagellum.
- Here is a depiction of a unicellular organism with a flagellum.
- Flagellum are a typical structure found on opisthokonts, sometimes at only specific points of the a life cycle.
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Chemotaxis
- Clockwise rotation - breaks the flagella bundle apart such that each flagellum points in a different direction, causing the bacterium to tumble in place.
- Many bacteria, such as Vibrio, are monoflagellated and have a single flagellum at one pole of the cell.
- Others possess a single flagellum that is kept inside the cell wall.
- CheY induces tumbling by interacting with the flagellar switch protein FliM, inducing a change from counter-clockwise to clockwise rotation of the flagellum.
- Change in the rotation state of a single flagellum can disrupt the entire flagella bundle and cause a tumble.
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Morphologically Unusual Proteobacteria
- One daughter is a mobile "swarmer" cell that has a single flagellum at one cell pole that provides swimming motility for chemotaxis.
- One daughter is a mobile "swarmer" cell that has a single flagellum at one cell pole that provides swimming motility for chemotaxis.
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Adherence
- In bacteriology, a fimbria (plural fimbriae; abbreviated FIM) is an appendage composed of curlin proteins that can be found on many Gram-negative and some Gram-positive bacteria that is thinner and shorter than a flagellum.
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Caulobacter Differentiation
- One daughter is a mobile "swarmer" cell that has a single flagellum at one cell pole that provides swimming motility for chemotaxis.