Dielectric relaxation and Brillouin scattering are jointly used in studying molecular relaxation in poly(propylene oxide) (PPO) and its solutions in methylcyclohexane. The dielectric method was applied to the more concentrated (100%, 80%, 60%, by volume) solutions over a wide temperature and frequency range (30 Hz to 8 GHz) in order that the variation in activation energy characteristic of a glass‐forming substance could be delineated. The present work extends previous work on the undiluted polymer to higher frequencies so that range of 12 decades in the dielectric loss maximum fmax as a function of temperature is now available. The “Antoine” equation is found to represent the behavior of log fmax, of the bulk concentrated solutions very well. The more dilute (40%, 20%) solutions were studied only in the high‐frequency (GHz) region since phase separation occurred at low temperatures. Both the temperature and dilution effects were interpreted in terms of free‐volume theory. Brillouin scattering spectra were obtained at several scattering angles and a wide range of temperatures. A maximum in the curve of hypersonic attenuation versus temperature was observed in each polymer solution. The attenuation maximum shifts toward lower temperature upon dilution, in agreement with the dielectric relaxation result. The Brillouin scattering follows different activation parameters and evidences a more rapid process than does the dielectric relaxation. It is speculated that it monitors a secondary or subglass relaxation, due perhaps, to damped torsional oscillations.
The Escherichia coli Tsr protein contains a periplasmic serine-binding domain that transmits ligand occupancy information to a cytoplasmic kinase-control domain to regulate the cell's flagellar motors. The Tsr input and output domains communicate through sequential conformational changes transmitted through a transmembrane helix (TM2), a five-residue control cable helix at the membrane-cytoplasm interface, and a four-helix HAMP bundle. Changes in serine occupancy are known to promote TM2 piston displacements in one subunit of the Tsr homodimer. We explored how such piston motions might be relayed through the control cable to reach the input AS1 helix of HAMP by constructing and characterizing mutant receptors that had one-residue insertions or deletions in the TM2-control cable segment of Tsr. TM2 deletions caused kinase-off output shifts; TM2 insertions caused kinase-on shifts. In contrast, control cable deletions caused kinase-on output, whereas insertions at the TM2-control cable junction caused kinase-off output. These findings rule out direct mechanical transmission of TM2 conformational changes to HAMP. Instead, we suggest that the Tsr control cable transmits input signals to HAMP by modulating the intensity of structural clashes between out-of-register TM2 and AS1 helices. Inward displacement of TM2 might alter the sidechain environment of control cable residues at the membrane core-headgroup interface, causing a break in the control cable helix to attenuate the register mismatch and enhance HAMP packing stability, leading to a kinase-off output response. This helix-clutch model offers a new perspective on the mechanism of transmembrane signaling in chemoreceptors.
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