The FliI ATPase couples ATP hydrolysis to substrate switching in bacterial flagellar type-III secretion
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Bacterial flagella are assembled by a specialized type III secretion system that exports structural subunits in a defined order. While the ATPase FliI is known to couple ATP hydrolysis to substrate translocation, its role in the transition between early and late secretion stages has remained unclear. Here, we systematically analyzed Salmonella enterica strains with defined FliI point mutations and found that FliI activity is dispensable for early substrate export and hook-basal body formation but is important for triggering the substrate specificity switch and promoting late substrate export. Mutant strains showed delayed gene expression from class 3 promoters, prolonged early secretion, and impaired flagellar filament assembly, despite normal FliI localization and oligomerization. These findings support the involvement of FliI in controlling the temporal dynamics of flagellar assembly. We propose that FliI contributes to substrate switching, ensuring robust and orderly fT3SS function. This study highlights the multifaceted role of the fT3SS ATPase in optimizing the efficiency and robustness of flagellum assembly.