The Bacterial Flagellar Hook

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The bacterial flagellar hook described in this article is one part of the bacterial flagellum. Please see [[Flagella, bacterial]] (under development at [[Sandbox4 Eric Martz]] for an overview of where the hook fits in the flagellum.
The bacterial flagellar hook described in this article is one part of the bacterial flagellum. Please see [[Flagella, bacterial]] (under development at [[Sandbox4 Eric Martz]] for an overview of where the hook fits in the flagellum.
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I am planning to adapt external content to fill this page. Until I get it done, please see [http://molvis.sdsc.edu/flagellar_hook/index.htm The Bacterial Flagellar Hook: A Molecular Universal Joint]. [[User:Eric Martz|Eric Martz]] 22:46, 10 October 2008 (IST)
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The flagellar hook is a molecular [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_joint universal joint] that transmits [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torque torque] from the motor, anchored in the bacterial cell wall, to the [[Flagellar filament of bacteria|flagellar filament]], the relatively rigid helical rod that propels the bacterial cell when rotated. The hook is flexible: it enables the filament to adopt a wide range of angles relative to the cell wall, yet continue to be rotated by the motor at all these angles.
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==Content Attribution==
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The initial content for this article was adapted from [http://molvis.sdsc.edu/flagellar_hook/index.htm The Bacterial Flagellar Hook: A Molecular Universal Joint], written in 2004-2006 for [[Protein Explorer]].
{{STRUCTURE_1wlg | PDB=1wlg | SCENE= }}
{{STRUCTURE_1wlg | PDB=1wlg | SCENE= }}

Revision as of 11:30, 6 June 2009

The bacterial flagellar hook described in this article is one part of the bacterial flagellum. Please see Flagella, bacterial (under development at Sandbox4 Eric Martz for an overview of where the hook fits in the flagellum.

The flagellar hook is a molecular universal joint that transmits torque from the motor, anchored in the bacterial cell wall, to the flagellar filament, the relatively rigid helical rod that propels the bacterial cell when rotated. The hook is flexible: it enables the filament to adopt a wide range of angles relative to the cell wall, yet continue to be rotated by the motor at all these angles.

Content Attribution

The initial content for this article was adapted from The Bacterial Flagellar Hook: A Molecular Universal Joint, written in 2004-2006 for Protein Explorer.

Template:STRUCTURE 1wlg

Proteopedia Page Contributors and Editors (what is this?)

Eric Martz, Michal Harel

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