The Escherichia coli chemosensory system consists of large arrays of transmembrane chemoreceptors associated with a dedicated histidine kinase, CheA, and a linker protein, CheW, that couples CheA activity to receptor control. The kinase activity responses to receptor ligand occupancy changes can be highly cooperative, reflecting allosteric coupling of multiple CheA and receptor molecules. Recent structural and functional studies have led to a working model in which receptor core complexes, the minimal units of signaling, are linked into hexagonal arrays through a unique interface 2 interaction between CheW and the P5 domain of CheA. To test this array model, we constructed and characterized CheA and CheW mutants with amino acid replacements at key interface 2 residues. The mutant proteins proved defective in interface 2-specific in vivo cross-linking assays, and formed signaling complexes that were dispersed around the cell membrane rather than clustered at the cell poles as in wild type chemosensory arrays. Interface 2 mutants down-regulated CheA activity in response to attractant stimuli in vivo, but with much less cooperativity than the wild type. Moreover, mutant cells containing fluorophore-tagged receptors exhibited greater basal anisotropy that changed rapidly in response to attractant stimuli, consistent with facile changes in loosely packed receptors. We conclude that interface 2 lesions disrupt important network connections between core complexes, preventing receptors from operating in large, allosteric teams. This work confirms the critical role of interface 2 in organizing the chemosensory array, in directing the clustered array to the cell poles, and in producing its highly cooperative signaling properties.chemotaxis | chemoreceptors | kinase activity | stimulus response
Motile bacteria use large receptor arrays to detect and follow chemical gradients in their environment. Extended receptor arrays, composed of networked signaling complexes, promote cooperative stimulus control of their associated signaling kinases. Here, we used structural lesions at the communication interface between core complexes to create an Escherichia coli strain with functional but dispersed signaling complexes. This strain allowed us to directly study how networking of signaling complexes affects chemotactic signaling and gradient-tracking performance. We demonstrate that networking of receptor complexes provides bacterial cells with about 10-fold-heightened detection sensitivity to attractants while maintaining a wide dynamic range over which receptor adaptational modifications can tune response sensitivity. These advantages proved especially critical for chemotaxis toward an attractant source under conditions in which bacteria are unable to alter the attractant gradient.
SummaryThe clustering of membrane-bound receptors plays an essential role in various biological systems. A notable model system for studying this phenomenon is the bacterial chemosensory cluster that allows motile bacteria to navigate along chemical gradients in their environment. While the basic structure of these chemosensory clusters is becoming clear, their dynamic nature and operation are not yet understood. By measuring the fluorescence polarization of tagged receptor clusters in live Escherichia coli cells, we provide evidence for stimulus-induced dynamics in these sensory clusters. We find that when a stimulus is applied, the packing of the receptors slowly decreases and that the process reverses when the stimulus is removed. Consistent with these physical changes we find that the effective cooperativity of the kinase response slowly evolves in the presence of a stimulus. Time-lapse fluorescence imaging indicates that, despite these changes, the receptor clusters do not generally dissociate upon ligand binding. These data reveal stimulus-dependent plasticity in chemoreceptor clusters.
Microorganisms use multiple two-component sensory systems to detect changes in their environment and elicit physiological responses. Despite their wide spread and importance, the intracellular organization of two-component sensory proteins in bacteria remains little investigated. A notable exception is the well-studied clustering of the chemoreceptor-kinase complexes that mediate chemotaxis behaviour. However, these chemosensory complexes differ fundamentally from other systems, both structurally and functionally. Therefore, studying the organization of typical sensory kinases in bacteria is essential for understanding the general role of receptor clustering in bacterial sensory signalling. Here, by studying mYFP-tagged sensory kinases in Escherichia coli, we show that the tagged TorS and EvgS sensors have a clear tendency for self-association and clustering. These sensors clustered even when expressed at a level of a few hundred copies per cell. Moreover, the mYFP-tagged response regulator TorR showed clear TorS-dependent clustering, indicating that untagged TorS sensors also tend to form clusters. We also provide evidence for the functionality of these tagged sensors. Experiments with truncated TorS or EvgS proteins suggested that clustering of EvgS sensors depends on the cytoplasmic part of the protein, whereas clustering of TorS sensors can be potentially mediated by the periplasmic/transmembrane domain. Overall, these findings support the notion that sensor clustering plays a role in bacterial sensory signalling beyond chemotaxis.
SummaryBacterial chemoreceptors sense environmental stimuli and govern cell movement by transmitting the information to the flagellar motors. The highly conserved cytoplasmic domain of chemoreceptors consists in an alpha-helical hairpin that forms in the homodimer a coiled-coil four-helix bundle. Several classes of chemoreceptors that differ in the length of the coiled-coil structure were characterized. Many bacterial species code for chemoreceptors that belong to different classes, but how these receptors are organized and function in the same cell remains an open question. E. coli cells normally code for single class chemoreceptors that form extended arrays based on trimers of dimers interconnected by the coupling protein CheW and the kinase CheA. This structure promotes effective coupling between the different receptors in the modulation of the kinase activity. In this work, we engineered functional derivatives of the Tsr chemoreceptor of E. coli that mimic receptors whose cytoplasmic domain is longer by two heptads. We found that these long Tsr receptors did not efficiently mix with the native receptors and appeared to function independently. Our results suggest that the assembly of membrane-bound receptors of different specificities into mixed clusters is dictated by the length-class to which the receptors belong, ensuring cooperative function only between receptors of the same class.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.