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Details of Grant 

EPSRC Reference: EP/S036660/1
Title: Structure, mechanism and assembly of a nano-scale biological rotary electric motor
Principal Investigator: Berry, Professor RM
Other Investigators:
Turberfield, Professor AJ
Researcher Co-Investigators:
Project Partners:
Department: Oxford Physics
Organisation: University of Oxford
Scheme: EPSRC Fellowship
Starts: 01 April 2020 Ends: 31 March 2025 Value (£): 2,042,298
EPSRC Research Topic Classifications:
Biological & Medicinal Chem. Biophysics
Chemical Biology
EPSRC Industrial Sector Classifications:
Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology
Related Grants:
Panel History:
Panel DatePanel NameOutcome
11 Sep 2019 EPSRC Physical Sciences - September 2019 Announced
15 Oct 2019 EPSRC Physical Sciences Fellowship Interview Panel 15 and 16 October 2019 Announced
Summary on Grant Application Form
The fundamental processes of life are now known to be carried out by large molecular complexes, more like machines than simple molecules. One of the grand challenges for science in the 21st century is to understand them in detail. This will have far reaching consequences across science and medicine. In this project I propose to integrate structural and functional understanding of a representative large molecular machine, pushing this challenge to a new level. The field of Single Molecule Biology, in which I have been a pioneer for two decades, studies individual molecular machines in real time, explicitly addressing the random thermal fluctuations that distinguish them fundamentally from macroscopic machines. This has led to spectacular successes in understanding in detail the mechanisms of a handful of small, relatively simple molecular machines. The next challenge is to understand large, complicated molecular machines. The Bacterial Flagellar Motor is an ideal model system - a rotary electric motor ~50 nm in diameter that propels swimming in many bacterial species. I will continue to develop new single-molecule techniques, and use them to map the relations between flagellar motor input and output and to detect the fine-structure of rotation and directional switching. My discovery of protein exchange in the flagellar motor revealed that the structure is constantly changing, which has hindered discovery of the mechanism. Now I have the knowledge and experimental tools to understand and control these structural fluctuations. This will be significant in itself; protein exchange in large molecular machines is increasingly recognized as an important general phenomenon. It will also provide the previously-missing platform for understanding the motor mechanism. I propose to apply my unique combination of structural and mechanistic experience to understanding the bacterial flagellar motor in detail, across an unprecedented range of length and time scales.

The bacterial flagellar motor is one of the best studied of all large molecular machines. It is a rotary electric motor common to many species of bacteria. Ion flux across the cytoplasmic membrane that encloses bacteria is coupled to rotation of a rotor spanning the bacterial membranes and cell wall. This drives swimming bacteria by rotating an extracellular filament at 100s of revs per second. Switches in motor direction, induced by signaling proteins in response to environmental factors, allow bacteria to navigate gradients of nutrients and other chemicals. The motor also acts as a mechanosensor, informing decisions about surface adhesion and biofilm formation. It is indispensable to the lifestyles of many bacteria, and is often crucial for biofilm formation and virulence.

The overall structure of the motor is known, as are the locations of many, and atomic structures of some, of its component proteins. The order in which different parts are made and assembled is known, and its function has been studied in quantitative detail for over 4 decades. Over the last 25 years I have contributed substantially to this body of knowledge, in particular in developing biophysical tools for understanding structural dynamics and the mechanisms of torque-generation. Nonetheless, fundamental details of structure, assembly and mechanism remain unclear - constrained by the limited resolution of our measurements and by unforeseen layers of complexity in structure and function.

The goal of this project is to achieve a holistic structural and functional understanding of the motor, from the sub-millisecond transitions that power rotation and switching, via protein exchange dynamics over seconds to minutes, all the way to elements of the structure that may be stable for days to months. The flagellar motor is one of the best-understood examples of a large molecular machine, and the principles and methods that I discover will find applications in a wide range of other molecular machines.

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Organisation Website: http://www.ox.ac.uk