Physical responses of bacterial chemoreceptors

被引:76
作者
Vaknin, Ady
Berg, Howard C.
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Dept Mol & Cellular Biol, Cambridge, MA 02138 USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Rowland Inst, Cambridge, MA 02142 USA
关键词
chemotaxis; receptors; membrane proteins; fluorescence polarization; fluorescence resonance energy transfer;
D O I
10.1016/j.jmb.2006.12.024
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Chemoreceptors of the bacterium Escherichia coli are thought to form trimers of homodimers that undergo conformational changes upon ligand binding and thereby signal a cytoplasmic kinase. We monitored the physical responses of trimers in living cells lacking other chemotaxis proteins by fluorescently tagging receptors and measuring changes in fluorescence anisotropy. These changes were traced to changes in energy transfer between fluorophores on different dimers of a trimer: attractants move these fluorophores farther apart, and repellents move them closer together. These measurements allowed us to define the responses of bare receptor oligomers to ligand binding and compare them to the corresponding response in kinase activity. Receptor responses could be fit by a simple "two-state" model in which receptor dimers are in either active or inactive conformations, from which energy bias and dissociation constants could be estimated. Comparison with responses in kinase-activity indicated that higher-order interactions are dominant in receptor clusters. (c) 2006 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:1416 / 1423
页数:8
相关论文
共 43 条
[1]   Molecular mechanisms and therapeutical implications of intramembrane receptor/receptor interactions among heptahelical receptors with examples from the striatopallidal GABA neurons [J].
Agnati, LF ;
Ferré, S ;
Lluis, C ;
Franco, R ;
Fuxe, K .
PHARMACOLOGICAL REVIEWS, 2003, 55 (03) :509-550
[2]   Dynamic receptor team formation can explain the high signal transduction gain in Escherichia coli [J].
Albert, R ;
Chiu, YW ;
Othmer, HG .
BIOPHYSICAL JOURNAL, 2004, 86 (05) :2650-2659
[3]   Collaborative signaling by mixed chemoreceptor teams in Escherichia coli [J].
Ames, P ;
Studdert, CA ;
Reiser, RH ;
Parkinson, JS .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2002, 99 (10) :7060-7065
[4]   Conformational suppression of inter-receptor signaling defects [J].
Ames, Peter ;
Parkinson, John S. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2006, 103 (24) :9292-9297
[5]   Ligand-specific activation of Escherichia coli chemoreceptor transmethylation [J].
Antommattei, FM ;
Munzner, JB ;
Weis, RM .
JOURNAL OF BACTERIOLOGY, 2004, 186 (22) :7556-7563
[6]   2-STATE MODEL FOR BACTERIAL CHEMORECEPTOR PROTEINS - THE ROLE OF MULTIPLE METHYLATION [J].
ASAKURA, S ;
HONDA, H .
JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 1984, 176 (03) :349-367
[7]   Robustness in simple biochemical networks [J].
Barkai, N ;
Leibler, S .
NATURE, 1997, 387 (6636) :913-917
[8]   Nanodiscs separate chemoreceptor oligomeric states and reveal their signaling properties [J].
Boldog, Thomas ;
Grimme, Stephen ;
Li, Mingshan ;
Sligar, Stephen G. ;
Hazelbauer, Gerald L. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2006, 103 (31) :11509-11514
[9]   Evidence that both ligand binding and covalent adaptation drive a two-state equilibrium in the aspartate receptor signaling complex [J].
Bornhorst, JA ;
Falke, JJ .
JOURNAL OF GENERAL PHYSIOLOGY, 2001, 118 (06) :693-710
[10]   Conformational spread: The propagation of allosteric states in large multiprotein complexes [J].
Bray, D ;
Duke, T .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF BIOPHYSICS AND BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURE, 2004, 33 :53-73