Transmembrane receptors in the signaling pathways of bacterial chemotaxis systems influence cell motility by forming noncovalent complexes with the cytoplasmic signaling proteins to regulate their activity. The requirements for receptor-mediated activation of CheA, the principal kinase of the Escherichia coli chemotaxis signaling pathway, were investigated using self-assembled clusters of a receptor fragment (CF) derived from the cytoplasmic domain of the aspartate receptor, Tar. Histidine-tagged Tar CF was assembled on the surface of sonicated unilamellar vesicles via a lipid containing the nickel-nitrilotriacetic acid moiety as a headgroup. In the presence of the adaptor protein CheW, CheA bound to and was activated approximately 180-fold by vesicle-bound CF. The extent of CheA activation was found to be independent of the level of covalent modification on the CF. Instead, the stability of the complex increased significantly as the level of covalent modification increased. Surface-assembled CF was also found to serve as a substrate for receptor methylation in a reaction catalyzed by the receptor methyltransferase, CheR. Since neither CheA activation nor CF methylation was observed in comparable samples in the absence of vesicles, it is concluded that surface templating generates the organization among CF subunits required for biochemical activity.
All cells possess transmembrane signaling systems that function in the environment of the lipid bilayer. In the Escherichia coli chemotaxis pathway, the binding of attractants to a two-dimensional array of receptors and signaling proteins simultaneously inhibits an associated kinase and stimulates receptor methylation-a slower process that restores kinase activity. These two opposing effects lead to robust adaptation toward stimuli through a physical mechanism that is not understood. Here, we provide evidence of a counterbalancing influence exerted by receptor density on kinase stimulation and receptor methylation. Receptor signaling complexes were reconstituted over a range of defined surface concentrations by using a template-directed assembly method, and the kinase and receptor methylation activities were measured. Kinase activity and methylation rates were both found to vary significantly with surface concentration-yet in opposite ways: samples prepared at high surface densities stimulated kinase activity more effectively than low-density samples, whereas lower surface densities produced greater methylation rates than higher densities. FRET experiments demonstrated that the cooperative change in kinase activity coincided with a change in the arrangement of the membrane-associated receptor domains. The counterbalancing influence of density on receptor methylation and kinase stimulation leads naturally to a model for signal regulation that is compatible with the known logic of the E. coli pathway. Density-dependent mechanisms are likely to be general and may operate when two or more membrane-related processes are influenced differently by the two-dimensional concentration of pathway elements.biological cooperativity ͉ methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein ͉ signal transduction ͉ liposome ͉ phosphorylation T he signaling pathway that mediates chemotaxis in Escherichia coli-like many systems-consists of transmembrane and membrane-associated proteins that function in the two-dimensional (2D) space of the lipid bilayer, where clustering, allostery, and cooperative interactions may all contribute to the regulation of signaling (1, 2). Studies of E. coli have shown that chemoreceptors, the adaptor protein, CheW (W), and the histidine kinase, CheA (A), form 2D arrays that are remarkable for the large number of receptors involved and their location at the cell poles (3-6). The ligand-binding domains of the homologous chemoreceptors endow the array with responsiveness toward specific attractant molecules; the conserved cytoplasmic domain (c-domain) conveys signals generated by ligand binding. In addition, the sensitivities of receptors toward cognate ligands are adjusted by the reversible methylation of a few conserved glutamic acid residues in the c-domain (7). Temporal comparisons are made between current and recent past chemoeffector concentrations by pathway proteins that propagate and terminate signals, which serves to bias the random-walk swimming behavior of E. coli in chemical gradients (8). Given its remarkable ...
Problems in membrane biology require methods to recreate the interactions between receptors and cytoplasmic signaling proteins at the membrane surface. Here, unilamellar vesicles composed of 1,2-dioleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine and a nickel-chelating lipid were used as templates to direct the assembly of proteins from the Escherichia coli chemotaxis signaling pathway. The bacterial chemoreceptors are known to form clusters, which promote the binding of the adaptor protein (CheW) and the kinase (CheA). When CheA was incubated with vesicles, CheW, and a histidine-tagged cytoplasmic domain fragment of the aspartate chemoreceptor (CF), the kinase activity was stimulated approximately 300-fold. Activity and pull-down assays were used with dynamic light scattering and electron microscopy to characterize the protein-vesicle compositions that were correlated with the high levels of activity, which demonstrated that CF-CheW-CheA complexes on the vesicle surface were the active entities. Assembly and stimulation occurred with vesicles of different sizes and CFs in different extents of glutamine substitution (in place of glutamate) at physiologically relevant sites. An exception was the combination of sonicated vesicles with the unsubstituted CF, which displayed lower CheA activity. The lower activity was attributed to the high curvature of the sonicated vesicles and a weaker tendency of the unsubstituted CF to self-assemble. Electron micrographs of the vesicle-protein assemblies revealed that protein binding induced pronounced changes in vesicle shape, which was consistent with the introduction of positive curvature in the outer leaflet of the bilayer. Overall, vesicle-mediated template-directed assembly is shown to be an effective way to form functional complexes of membrane-associated proteins and suggests that significant changes in membrane shape can be involved in the process of transmembrane signaling.
A new method for measurement of thermodynamic Henry's law constants (H) is reported. In this method, the optical absorbance of a dilute aqueous solution containing an organic compound is followed with time as the compound partitions into the air above the solution in a sealed vessel. The change in optical absorbance (i.e., change in concentration) and the vapor to liquid volume ratio of the vessel are then used to calculate the value for H. The concentration of the organic compound in the aqueous and vapor phases need not be known. This method allows the approach to equilibrium to be observed in real time so that attainment of equilibrium is readily apparent. This method works particularly well for water‐soluble compounds having low vapor pressures. The applicability of this method is limited to compounds that exhibit significant optical absorbance in the ultraviolet and visible regions of the electromagnetic spectrum. Values for H and their temperature dependencies measured using this new method are reported for methacrolein, methyl vinyl ketone, benzaldehyde, and acetophenone. Values for H are also reported for benzene, toluene, and ethylbenzene at 298 K. All reported H data are compared with previously reported values.
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