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1 d kidneys, only 7 (0.14%) were identified as swarmers.
2 developed techniques to isolate the dominant swarmers.
3 ario is apparently not relevant to temperate swarmers.
4 kinase is localized to the flagellar pole in swarmer and predivisional cells but is dispersed through
5 gF, and flgI increased significantly in both swarmer and pseudoswarmer cells, as did genes in a degen
6 n of distinct scaffold-signaling hubs at the swarmer and stalked cell poles constitutes the basis of
7 istinct control of available CcrM in progeny swarmer and stalked cells serves to protect the hemimeth
8 ates such that their concentration is low in swarmer and stalked cells, peaks in pre-divisional cells
9 e demonstrate that the functionally distinct swarmer and stalked daughter cells produced by the model
10               Upon asymmetric cell division, swarmer and stalked progeny cells employ distinct mechan
11  and remain predominantly at the new pole of swarmer and stalked progeny upon completion of division.
12 a mostly uniform distribution throughout the swarmer and stalked stages of the cell cycle but more hi
13 ding a scenario for robust switching between swarmer and stalked states.
14 aweed, Vibrio alginolyticus B522, a vigorous swarmer, and Shewanella algae B516, which inhibits V. al
15                       We show that bacterial swarmers are highly predictive of intestinal stress in m
16 e stalked cell, unphosphorylated DivK in the swarmer cell activates an intricate transcriptional casc
17 ntus divides asymmetrically to a flagellated swarmer cell and a cell with a stalk.
18  asymmetrically to produce a non-replicating swarmer cell and a replicating stalked cell.
19 ium Caulobacter crescentus produces a motile swarmer cell and a sessile stalked cell at each cell div
20 s rise to two different cell types: a motile swarmer cell and a sessile stalked cell.
21 lls divide asymmetrically, yielding a motile swarmer cell and a sessile stalked cell.
22 s asymmetric cell division to yield a motile swarmer cell and a stalked cell in the gram-negative bac
23 ter crescentus divides asymmetrically into a swarmer cell and a stalked cell, a process that is gover
24 t cell types at each cell division, a motile swarmer cell and an adhesive stalked cell.
25 rsed throughout the cytoplasm of the progeny swarmer cell and is localized to the pole of the stalked
26 Instead, doubling of the average length of a swarmer cell by suppression of cell division effectively
27 rives progression of the coupled stalked and swarmer cell cycles of the bacterium Caulobacter crescen
28 period under typical culture conditions, the swarmer cell differentiates into a replicative stalked c
29 diated by the synthesis of a holdfast as the swarmer cell differentiates into a stalked cell.
30 ntiate showing the essential role of flaA in swarmer cell differentiation and behaviour.
31 se results suggest that FliL plays a role in swarmer cell differentiation and implicate FliL as criti
32 ditions inhibiting flagellar rotation induce swarmer cell differentiation and implicating a rotating
33 ression of fliL+ in wild-type cells prevents swarmer cell differentiation and motility, a result also
34 the addition of polyvinylpyrrolidone induced swarmer cell differentiation and resulted in a fourfold
35 utrescine restored both the normal timing of swarmer cell differentiation and the ability to migrate
36 tical to transduction of the signal inducing swarmer cell differentiation and virulence gene expressi
37 ession of wosA also resulted in constitutive swarmer cell differentiation in liquid medium, a normall
38 al through the chemotaxis pathway and induce swarmer cell differentiation in response to signals othe
39 tudy also suggests that despite constitutive swarmer cell differentiation in wosA-overexpressing stra
40               A search for genes controlling swarmer cell differentiation of Vibrio parahaemolyticus
41            ZapA activity is not required for swarmer cell differentiation or swarming behaviour, as Z
42                                              Swarmer cell differentiation parallels an increased expr
43 l transduction from solid surfaces to induce swarmer cell differentiation, possibly via alterations i
44 ile the latter two classes were defective in swarmer cell differentiation, representative LPS mutants
45 f growth that are formed as cyclic events of swarmer cell differentiation, swarming migration, and ce
46 zation of urinary tract surfaces is aided by swarmer cell differentiation, which is initiated by inhi
47 ogen, iron limitation is a signal modulating swarmer cell differentiation.
48 k and holdfast occur at the same pole during swarmer cell differentiation.
49 e two-component systems cooperate to promote swarmer cell differentiation.
50  other proteins and virulence factors during swarmer cell differentiation.
51 lator FlhD(4)C(2), which ultimately controls swarmer cell differentiation.
52 g growth in liquid and on agar plates during swarmer cell differentiation.
53 16-fold higher in the disA background during swarmer cell differentiation.
54             DisA overexpression also blocked swarmer cell differentiation.
55 A fliL mutation that results in constitutive swarmer cell elongation also increased wosA transcriptio
56 regulator that controls the establishment of swarmer cell fate.
57                        This event primes the swarmer cell for the impending transition into a stalked
58          These mutants were constitutive for swarmer cell gene expression, inappropriately expressing
59  its flagellar motors, which in turn control swarmer cell gene expression.
60  inappropriately expressing high levels of a swarmer cell gene fusion product when grown in liquid.
61           When the operon was overexpressed, swarmer cell gene transcription was induced in liquid cu
62 iately after cell division and (ii) a motile swarmer cell in which DNA replication is blocked.
63 entus differentiates from a motile, foraging swarmer cell into a sessile, replication-competent stalk
64                  Upon differentiation of the swarmer cell into a stalked cell, full length PodJ is sy
65 ation initiator, upon differentiation of the swarmer cell into a stalked cell.
66 genesis of the single polar flagellum of the swarmer cell is the best-studied aspect of this developm
67 trogen limitation significantly extended the swarmer cell life span.
68 thesize that nitrogen limitation extends the swarmer cell lifetime by delaying the onset of a sequenc
69 ion of external environmental cues, sets the swarmer cell on a path to differentiate into a stalked c
70       The terminus moves from the end of the swarmer cell opposite the origin to midcell.
71 ntrolling the decision to be a highly mobile swarmer cell or a more adhesive, biofilm-proficient cell
72 umerous unsheathed lateral flagella move the swarmer cell over surfaces.
73  discovered a binding partner of PopA at the swarmer cell pole that together with PopA regulates the
74 ntegrated into the membrane at the incipient swarmer cell pole, where it initiates flagellar assembly
75 similar daughter cells: a stalked cell and a swarmer cell that assembles several pili at the flagella
76 ed cell competent for DNA replication, and a swarmer cell that is unable to initiate DNA replication
77 m divides asymmetrically to produce a motile swarmer cell that represses DNA replication and a sessil
78                The morphological change from swarmer cell to stalked cell is a result of changes of f
79 comitantly with the transition of the motile swarmer cell to the sessile stalked cell.
80 ngated, hyperflagellated, and multinucleated swarmer cell type when it is grown on a surface.
81 a typical Gram-negative rod) to an elongated swarmer cell when grown on a solid surface.
82 ed cells but degraded in the non-replicative swarmer cell where ClpAP alone degrades FtsA and both Cl
83 obacter crescentus is asymmetric, yielding a swarmer cell with several polar pili and a non-piliated
84          PodJ(S), sequestered to the progeny swarmer cell, is subsequently released from the polar me
85 lation migration across surfaces, called the swarmer cell.
86 , which replaces the flagellum of the motile swarmer cell.
87 thesis of the pili filaments in the daughter swarmer cell.
88 re only present at the flagellar pole of the swarmer cell.
89 on, resulting in a stalked cell and a motile swarmer cell.
90 vides asymmetrically, producing a mother and swarmer cell.
91 change that culminates in the formation of a swarmer cell.
92 d accumulates preferentially in the daughter swarmer cell.
93 aL mutant was unable to differentiate into a swarmer cell.
94 hter cells, a stalked cell and a flagellated swarmer cell.
95 mer cell to an elongated, highly flagellated swarmer cell.
96  by flagella is thought to trigger bacterial swarmer-cell differentiation, an important step in patho
97                         Here, we show that a swarmer-cell-pole scaffold, PodJ, forms biomolecular con
98 alA-flaB locus from wild-type swimmer cells, swarmer cells and cells obtained after urinary tract inf
99        Transcription of ftsZ is repressed in swarmer cells and is activated concurrently with the ini
100    The initial stage of attachment occurs in swarmer cells and is facilitated by flagellar motility a
101 he fliL transcriptome with that of wild-type swarmer cells and showed that nearly all genes associate
102 cious swarming mutants are also constitutive swarmer cells and swarm on minimal agar medium.
103 origin is located at the flagellated pole of swarmer cells and, immediately after the initiation of D
104                                              Swarmer cells are generally more flagellated and longer
105                                 H. neptunium swarmer cells are highly motile via a single polar flage
106                                              Swarmer cells are specially adapted to rapidly transloca
107 vision and contain FtsZ, whereas the progeny swarmer cells are unable to initiate DNA replication and
108 ntration, FtsZ was artificially expressed in swarmer cells at a level equivalent to that found in pre
109 h slowdown, but the effect is more severe in swarmer cells because they have a longer G1 phase.
110 ypothesize that this novel mechanism acts on swarmer cells born in a biofilm, where eDNA can accumula
111 e processes in Caulobacter and is present in swarmer cells but absent from stalked cells.
112 es a large gene system and differentiates to swarmer cells capable of movement over and colonization
113                        Expression of FtsZ in swarmer cells did not alter the timing of cell constrict
114 nsistent with this observation, H. neptunium swarmer cells did not respond to any chemotactic stimuli
115                                           As swarmer cells differentiate into stalked cells (G1/S tra
116      FtsZ is synthesized slightly before the swarmer cells differentiate into stalked cells and the i
117 ivated in liquid broth and hyper-flagellated swarmer cells from solid medium.
118 cells were extremely long and thus resembled swarmer cells harvested from a surface.
119 e rapidly away from a colony, analogously to swarmer cells in bacteria with flagella.
120  media, thereby increasing the proportion of swarmer cells in mixed culture.
121 , result in the inappropriate development of swarmer cells in noninducing liquid media or hyperelonga
122 ue to an increase in the number of elongated swarmer cells in the population.
123 , and in the absence of SpoT, carbon-starved swarmer cells inappropriately initiated DNA replication.
124 is synthesized during the differentiation of swarmer cells into replicating stalked cells.
125          Upon depletion of available carbon, swarmer cells lacking the ability to synthesize ppGpp or
126 d a technique for observing isolated E. coli swarmer cells moving on an agar substrate and confined i
127                                              Swarmer cells of Caulobacter crescentus are devoid of th
128                                       Motile swarmer cells of Hyphomicrobium strain W1-1B displayed p
129                                  We adsorbed swarmer cells of Serratia marcescens to polydimethylsilo
130 n noninducing liquid media or hyperelongated swarmer cells on agar media.
131 rium can differentiate into hyperflagellated swarmer cells on agar of an appropriate consistency (0.5
132 ls, we were unable to detect the holdfast in swarmer cells or at the flagellated poles of predivision
133                    Furthermore, we show that swarmer cells produce more ppGpp than stalked cells upon
134 motility is a random dispersal mechanism for swarmer cells rather than a stimulus-controlled navigati
135 ost-division degradation of FtsA and FtsQ in swarmer cells reduces their concentration to 7% and 10%
136 ve from these results that the C. crescentus swarmer cells swim more efficiently than both E. coli an
137               Forward swimming C. crescentus swarmer cells tend to get physically trapped at the surf
138 e half-life of FtsA increases from 13 min in swarmer cells to 55 min in stalked cell types, confirmin
139 d, increasing ca. twofold from low levels in swarmer cells to a maximum immediately prior to cell div
140 lyzed the adaptive response of C. crescentus swarmer cells to carbon starvation and found that there
141 ci contour lengths in Caulobacter crescentus swarmer cells to determine the in vivo configuration of
142 ances initial attachment and enables progeny swarmer cells to escape from the monolayer biofilm.
143                             Both swimmer and swarmer cells transcribe flaA, but not flaB.
144 egained motility yet produced differentiated swarmer cells under noninducing conditions transcribed f
145                                        Thus, swarmer cells utilize at least two independent signaling
146        Differentiation of the speB mutant to swarmer cells was delayed by two hours relative to wild-
147                                    Elongated swarmer cells were only rarely observed.
148 ble of differentiating into hyperflagellated swarmer cells when plated on a solid agar surface.
149     Expression of umoA (a known regulator of swarmer cells), flgF, and flgI increased significantly i
150                                           In swarmer cells, a short form of PodJ is localized at the
151 that SpoT is required for this phenomenon in swarmer cells, and in the absence of SpoT, carbon-starve
152 ional flagellar pole, remain at this pole in swarmer cells, and localize at the stalk tip after the s
153 e inappropriate production of differentiated swarmer cells, called pseudoswarmer cells, under nonindu
154                                   In progeny swarmer cells, CcrM is completely degraded by Lon before
155                                           In swarmer cells, CpdR is in the phosphorylated state, thus
156                   Because CtrA is present in swarmer cells, is degraded at the same time as ftsZ tran
157                                       Unlike swarmer cells, pseudoswarmer cells are not hyperflagella
158                                       Unlike swarmer cells, pseudoswarmers displayed increased activi
159 t extract (PYE) medium contain >70% and >80% swarmer cells, respectively.
160 luorescence microscopy showed that, in these swarmer cells, simply increasing FtsZ concentration was
161  and produces cells that look like wild-type swarmer cells, termed "pseudoswarmer cells," that are el
162 e, are evenly distributed between mother and swarmer cells, whereas hpnN is required for the C(35) ho
163 intracellular location of SMC showed that in swarmer cells, which do not replicate DNA, the protein f
164 ersed in the newly divided progeny stalk and swarmer cells.
165 ng sessile-stalked and piliated, flagellated swarmer cells.
166 longated (10- to 80-mum), highly flagellated swarmer cells.
167 to and silences the origin of replication in swarmer cells.
168 he CtrA protein and the size distribution of swarmer cells.
169 he incipient stalked pole in differentiating swarmer cells.
170 tion of the early cell division gene ftsZ in swarmer cells.
171 tative swimmer cells to fully differentiated swarmer cells.
172 pA is fully expressed only in differentiated swarmer cells.
173 lts in transcription of the ftsZ promoter in swarmer cells.
174 acteria into successively thicker cohorts of swarmer cells.
175  form that persists at the flagellar pole of swarmer cells.
176 ssion of flagellin that is characteristic of swarmer cells.
177 ibited a threefold increase in expression in swarmer cells.
178 ganisms is faster growing and may detach as "swarmer" cells.
179 onents of the flagellum are expressed in the swarmer compartment of the predivisional cell through th
180 mostly due to the degradation of FtsZ in the swarmer compartment of the predivisional cell.
181 esis, GapR accumulates preferentially in the swarmer compartment of the predivisional cell.
182 t it does not localize preferentially to the swarmer compartment when expressed exogenously in Caulob
183 s, also accumulate in the predivisional cell swarmer compartment when expressed in Caulobacter The Es
184 he flagellum, are transcribed in the nascent swarmer compartment.
185 ment and at the site of cell division in the swarmer compartment.
186 r normally yields larger stalked and smaller swarmer daughters, we observe a loss of asymmetric size
187 a that swarm on "hard" agar surfaces (robust swarmers) display a hyperflagellated and hyperelongated
188 requiring a "softer" agar surface (temperate swarmers) do not exhibit such a dramatic morphology.
189 is study aims to define a role for bacterial swarmers in amelioration of intestinal stress.
190                SM3 and other known commensal swarmers, in contrast to their mutant strains, abrogated
191                                          The swarmer is adapted to movement over and colonization of
192 and separable developmental stages, a motile swarmer phase and a sessile stalked phase.
193       A single flagellum is assembled at the swarmer pole of the predivisional cell and is released l
194 he preferential transcription of hfaA in the swarmer pole of the predivisional cell.
195 ested that the holdfast first appears at the swarmer pole of the predivisional cell.
196 sis of FliF and the targeting of FliF to the swarmer pole together contribute to the asymmetric local
197 r indirectly to target PleC to the incipient swarmer pole, to establish the cellular asymmetry that l
198  and to prevent premature development of the swarmer pole.
199 ked pole and the flagellar basal body at the swarmer pole.
200 ric at the stalked pole and monomeric at the swarmer pole.
201  FlbD-1204 allele also resulted in a loss of swarmer-pole-specific transcription.
202 te degradation of FtsZ from both stalked and swarmer progeny cells.
203 o the steady-state population than did their swarmer siblings.
204  by nutrient deprivation to favor the motile swarmer state.
205               For polarly flagellated robust swarmers, there is good evidence that restriction of fla
206 e after cell division and is degraded during swarmer to stalked cell differentiation.
207 ional activation of several dna genes at the swarmer to stalked cell transition occurs in response to
208 difficulty ejecting the flagellum during the swarmer to stalked cell transition.
209 other two are induced at the transition from swarmer to stalked cell, coincident with the initiation
210 he cell occurs during the differentiation of swarmer to stalked cells.
211   FliF is proteolytically turned over during swarmer-to-stalked cell differentiation, coinciding with
212  transition is temporally separated from the swarmer-to-stalked cell differentiation, which is normal
213 and found that there was a block in both the swarmer-to-stalked cell polar differentiation program an
214 uired for the carbon starvation block of the swarmer-to-stalked cell polar differentiation program.
215                                       At the swarmer-to-stalked cell transition and in the stalked co
216 id proteolysis as cells enter S-phase at the swarmer-to-stalked cell transition and in the stalked po
217 gulator is cleared by proteolysis during the swarmer-to-stalked cell transition as usual, but DNA rep
218 elopment gene, podJ, is expressed during the swarmer-to-stalked cell transition of the Caulobacter cr
219 alloprotease MmpA for degradation during the swarmer-to-stalked cell transition.
220 er motif with several genes expressed at the swarmer-to-stalked cell transition; while another appear
221 the kinase form of PleC is essential for the swarmer-to-stalked transition and to prevent premature d
222  and polyphosphate (polyP), that inhibit the swarmer-to-stalked transition in both complex and glucos
223 ion factor, increases during the Caulobacter swarmer-to-stalked transition just before the G1/S trans
224                                   During the swarmer-to-stalked transition, PodJS must be degraded to
225 ll cycle demonstrates that disruption of the swarmer-to-stalked-cell developmental sequence does not
226 leC kinase mutants, which are blocked in the swarmer-to-stalked-cell transition and form flagellated,
227 of these topo IV genes is induced during the swarmer-to-stalked-cell transition when cells prepare fo
228 ron initiates swarming early and is a better swarmer, while the opposite is true for a cell with high

 
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