High stimulus unmasks positive feedback in an autoregulated bacterial signaling circuit
- 11 November 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 105 (45) , 17457-17462
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0807278105
Abstract
We examined the effect of positive autoregulation on the steady-state behavior of the PhoQ/PhoP two-component signaling system in Escherichia coli. We found that autoregulation has no effect on the steady-state output for a large range of input stimulus, which was modulated by varying the concentration of magnesium in the growth medium. We provide an explanation for this finding with a simple model of the PhoQ/PhoP circuit. The model predicts that even when autoregulation is manifest across a range of stimulus levels, the effects of positive feedback on the steady-state output emerge only in the limit that the system is strongly stimulated. Consistent with this prediction, amplification associated with autoregulation was observed in growth-limiting levels of magnesium, a condition that strongly activates PhoQ/PhoP. In a further test of the model, we found that strains harboring a phosphatase-defective PhoQ showed strong positive feedback and considerable cell-to-cell variability under growth conditions where the wildtype circuit did not show this behavior. Our results demonstrate a simple and general mechanism for regulating the positive feedback associated with autoregulation within a bacterial signaling circuit to boost response range and maintain a relatively uniform and graded output.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Rewiring the Specificity of Two-Component Signal Transduction SystemsCell, 2008
- Positive feedback in cellular control systemsBioEssays, 2008
- Input–output robustness in simple bacterial signaling systemsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Stimulus-dependent differential regulation in the Escherichia coli PhoQ–PhoP systemProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Network motifs: theory and experimental approachesNature Reviews Genetics, 2007
- Activation of the Bacterial Sensor Kinase PhoQ by Acidic pHMolecular Cell, 2007
- Autoregulation Is Essential for Precise Temporal and Steady-State Regulation by theBordetellaBvgAS PhosphorelayJournal of Bacteriology, 2007
- Phosphatases modulate the bistable sporulation gene expression pattern in Bacillus subtilisMolecular Microbiology, 2005
- Stripping Bacillus: ComK auto‐stimulation is responsible for the bistable response in competence developmentMolecular Microbiology, 2005
- Magnesium transport in Salmonella typhimurium: biphasic magnesium and time dependence of the transcription of the mgtA and mgtCB lociMicrobiology, 1998