We identified a protein, Aer, as a signal transducer that senses intracellular energy levels rather than the external environment and that transduces signals for aerotaxis (taxis to oxygen) and other energy-dependent behavioral responses in Escherichia coli. Domains in Aer are similar to the signaling domain in chemotaxis receptors and the putative oxygen-sensing domain of some transcriptional activators. A putative FAD-binding site in the N-terminal domain of Aer shares a consensus sequence with the NifL, Bat, and Wc-1 signal-transducing proteins that regulate gene expression in response to redox changes, oxygen, and blue light, respectively. A double mutant deficient in aer and tsr, which codes for the serine chemoreceptor, was negative for aerotaxis, redox taxis, and glycerol taxis, each of which requires the proton motive force and͞or electron transport system for signaling. We propose that Aer and Tsr sense the proton motive force or cellular redox state and thereby integrate diverse signals that guide E. coli to environments where maximal energy is available for growth.
Nosocomial infections caused by methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) are a significant epidemiological problem. Detecting the sources of epidemic strains and preventing their access to patients, however, depend upon the availability of techniques to reliably distinguish among MRSA strains. We evaluated restriction enzyme analysis of plasmid DNA for use as an epidemiological marker of MRSA strains. The diversity of plasmid types was assessed by examining 120 clinical and environmental MRSA isolates from five southern California hospitals and from the American Type Culture Collection. Thirty-seven distinctive EcoRI digestion patterns were observed. We characterized each strain by the number of plasmids it contained and the sizes of the fragments that were generated by EcoRI. Very few of the isolates (4.2%) lacked plasmids, and some (6.7%) contained DNA that was not digested by EcoRI. Several isolates (12.5%) contained two or more plasmids. We were able to assess the stability of MRSA plasmid types by tracking epidemic strains over a 2-year period. We also examined successive isolates from 10 individual patients during their hospitalization. In au but one case, the patient's plasmid profiles remained unchanged. We conclude that the diversity and stability of MRSA plasmid types make them excellent epidemiological markers. In support of this conclusion, we found that our data provided significant epidemiological insights. Two epidemic strains, accounting for more than half of the infections, were identified in the five hospitals. The remaining cases were sporadic, caused by MRSA strains that appeared very infrequently and that may have originated from sources outside the hospitals.
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