Differential Activation of Escherichia coli Chemoreceptors by Blue-Light Stimuli
Open Access
- 1 June 2006
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Journal of Bacteriology
- Vol. 188 (11) , 3962-3971
- https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.00149-06
Abstract
Enteric bacteria tumble, swim slowly, and are then paralyzed upon exposure to 390- to 530-nm light. Here, we analyze this complex response in Escherichia coli using standard fluorescence microscope optics for excitation at 440 ± 5 nm. The slow swimming and paralysis occurred only in dye-containing growth media or buffers. Excitation elicited complete paralysis within a second in 1 μM proflavine dye, implying specific motor damage, but prolonged tumbling in buffer alone. The tumbling half-response times were subsecond for onset but more than a minute for recovery. The response required the chemotaxis signal protein CheY and receptor-dependent activation of its kinase CheA. The study of deletion mutants revealed a specific requirement for either the aerotaxis receptor Aer or the chemoreceptor Tar but not the Tar homolog Tsr. The action spectrum of the wild-type response was consistent with a flavin, but the chromophores remain to be identified. The motile response processed via Aer was sustained, with recovery to either step-up or -down taking more than a minute. The response processed via Tar was transient, recovering on second time scales comparable to chemotactic responses. The response duration and amplitude were dependent on relative expression of Aer, Tar, and Tsr. The main response features were reproduced when each receptor was expressed singly from a plasmid in a receptorless host strain. However, time-resolved motion analysis revealed subtle kinetic differences that reflect the role of receptor cluster interactions in kinase activation-deactivation dynamics.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Signaling Interactions between the Aerotaxis Transducer Aer and Heterologous Chemoreceptors in Escherichia coliJournal of Bacteriology, 2006
- Loss- and Gain-of-Function Mutations in the F1-HAMP Region of theEscherichia coliAerotaxis Transducer AerJournal of Bacteriology, 2006
- Clustering requires modified methyl‐accepting sites in low‐abundance but not high‐abundance chemoreceptors of Escherichia coliMolecular Microbiology, 2005
- Biphasic Excitation by Leucine in Escherichia coli ChemotaxisJournal of Bacteriology, 2004
- FlhD/FlhC Is a Regulator of Anaerobic Respiration and the Entner-Doudoroff Pathway through Induction of the Methyl-Accepting Chemotaxis Protein AerJournal of Bacteriology, 2003
- Determinants of chemotactic signal amplification in Escherichia coliJournal of Molecular Biology, 2001
- Aerotaxis and Other Energy-Sensing Behavior in BacteriaAnnual Review of Microbiology, 1999
- Mutants with Defective Phosphatase Activity Show No Phosphorylation-dependent Oligomerization of CheZ: THE PHOSPHATASE OF BACTERIAL CHEMOTAXISPublished by Elsevier ,1996
- The steady-state counterclockwise/clockwise ratio of bacterial flagellar motors is regulated by protonmotive forceJournal of Molecular Biology, 1980
- Bacterial motility and chemotaxis: Light-induced tumbling response and visualization of individual flagellaJournal of Molecular Biology, 1974