Chemotaxis receptors and associated signalling proteins in Escherichia coli form clusters that consist of thousands of molecules and are the largest native protein complexes described to date in bacteria. Clusters are located at the cell poles and laterally along the cell body, and play an important role in signal transduction. Much work has been done to study the structure and function of receptor clusters, but the significance of their positioning and the underlying mechanisms are not understood. Here, we used fluorescence imaging to study cluster distribution and follow cluster dynamics during cell growth. Our data show that lateral clusters localise to specific periodic positions along the cell body, which mark future division sites and are involved in the localisation of the replication machinery. The chemoreceptor cluster positioning is thus intricately related to the overall structure and division of an E. coli cell.
SummaryChemotactic stimuli in bacteria are sensed by large sensory complexes, or receptor clusters, that consist of tens of thousands of proteins. Receptor clusters appear to play a key role in signal processing, but their structure remains poorly understood. Here we used fluorescent protein fusions to study in vivo formation of the cluster core, which consists of receptors, a kinase CheA and an assisting protein CheW. We show that receptors aggregate through their cytoplasmic domains even in the absence of other chemotaxis proteins. Clustering is further enhanced by the binding of CheW. Surprisingly, we observed that some fragments of CheA bind receptor clusters well in the absence of CheW, although the latter does assist the binding of full-length CheA. The resulting mode of receptor cluster formation is consistent with an experimentally observed flexible stoichiometry of chemosensory complexes and with assumptions of recently proposed computer models of signal processing in chemotaxis.
Signal processing in bacterial chemotaxis relies on large sensory complexes consisting of thousands of protein molecules. These clusters create a scaffold that increases the efficiency of pathway reactions and amplifies and integrates chemotactic signals. The cluster core in Escherichia coli comprises a ternary complex composed of receptors, kinase CheA, and adaptor protein CheW. All other chemotaxis proteins localize to clusters by binding either directly to receptors or to CheA. Here, we used fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) to investigate the turnover of chemotaxis proteins at the cluster and their mobility in the cytoplasm. We found that cluster exchange kinetics were proteinspecific and took place on several characteristic time scales that correspond to excitation, adaptation, and cell division, respectively. We further applied analytical and numerical data fitting to analyze intracellular protein diffusion and to estimate the rate constants of cluster equilibration in vivo. Our results indicate that the rates of protein turnover at the cluster have evolved to ensure optimal performance of the chemotaxis pathway.T he relatively simple chemotaxis signaling pathway in Escherichia coli, with analogues of its components-receptors, kinase, phosphatase, and adaptation system-common to many other networks, is an ideal model system for studying general principles of signal transduction (1-3). In E. coli, allosteric interactions among receptors in chemosensory arrays or clusters (Fig. 1), where receptors of different ligand specificities are intermixed (4, 5), integrate and amplify chemotactic stimuli. The networked receptors regulate the autophosphorylation activity of an associated kinase, CheA, which in turn controls the phosphorylation state of a small response regulator protein, CheY, to modulate the cell's flagellar motors. The signaling pathway also includes CheZ, a phosphatase of CheY-P. Excitatory signaling is rapid: changes in CheY phosphorylation level upon repellent or attractant stimulation take place in several hundreds of milliseconds (6-9).In addition, the pathway includes an adaptation system, comprising methyltransferase CheR and methylesterase CheB, that adjusts the activity and sensitivity of the sensory complex by methylating and demethylating receptors. The adaptation system uses feedback from receptor and kinase activity to return CheY phosphorylation to a preset level even in the presence of high levels of chemoeffectors. The time course of the adaptation process depends on stimulus strength (10, 11), varying from several seconds for weak stimuli to several minutes for strong stimuli.Most of the reaction rates and binding constants for chemotaxis proteins have been measured in vitro, and the average intracellular protein concentrations under standard growth conditions were determined (12,13). This abundance of biochemical data has inspired multiple attempts at detailed kinetic analysis of the chemotaxis pathway (9, 13-17), making it the most thoroughly modeled signaling pathw...
SummaryChemoreceptors and cytoplasmic chemotaxis proteins in Escherichia coli form clusters that play a key role in signal processing. These clusters localize at cell poles and at specific positions along the cell body which correspond to future division sites, but the details of cluster formation and the mechanism of cluster distribution remain unclear. Here, we used fluorescence microscopy to investigate how the numbers and sizes of receptor clusters depend on the expression level of chemotaxis proteins and on the cell length. We show that the average cluster number saturates at high levels of protein expression at approximately 3.7 clusters per cell, well below the number of available positioning sites. Correspondingly, distances between clusters in filamentous cells saturate at an average of 1 mm but, even at saturating expression levels, individual cluster numbers and distances show a broad distribution around the mean. Our data imply a stochastic mode of cluster assembly, where a defined average interval between clusters along the cell body arises from competition between nucleation of new clusters and growth of existing clusters. Upon subsequent anchorage to defined lateral sites, clusters grow with rates that inversely depend on their size, and become polar upon several rounds of cell division.
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