Abstract

Aer, a low-abundance signal transducer in Escherichia coli, mediates robust aerotactic behavior, possibly through interactions with methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCP). We obtained evidence for interactions between Aer and the high-abundance aspartate (Tar) and serine (Tsr) receptors. Aer molecules bearing a cysteine reporter diagnostic for trimer-of-dimer formation yielded cross-linking products upon treatment with a trifunctional maleimide reagent. Aer also formed mixed cross-linking products with a similarly marked Tar reporter. An Aer trimer contact mutation known to abolish trimer formation by MCPs eliminated Aer trimer and mixed trimer formation. Trimer contact alterations known to cause epistatic behavior in MCPs also produced epistatic properties in Aer. Amino acid replacements in the Tar trimer contact region suppressed an epistatic Aer signaling defect, consistent with compensatory conformational changes between directly interacting proteins. In cells lacking MCPs, Aer function required high-level expression, comparable to the aggregate number of receptors in a wild-type cell. Aer proteins with clockwise (CW)-biased signal output cannot function under these conditions but do so in the presence of MCPs, presumably through formation of mixed signaling teams. The Tar signaling domain was sufficient for functional rescue. Moreover, CW-biased lesions did not impair aerotactic signaling in a hybrid Aer-Tar transducer capable of adjusting its steady-state signal output via methylation-dependent sensory adaptation. Thus, MCPs most likely assist mutant Aer proteins to signal productively by forming collaborative signaling teams. Aer evidently evolved to operate collaboratively with high-abundance receptors but can also function without MCP assistance, provided that it can establish a suitable prestimulus swimming pattern.

Highlights

  • Aer, an unorthodox member of the methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein (MCP) family of chemoreceptors, is the major oxygen-sensing transducer in Escherichia coli (5, 19)

  • Maximal aerotactic expansion occurred with 50 ␮M IPTG, which leads to a level of Aer expression about 350-fold higher than that supported by the chromosomal gene

  • In wild-type E. coli, Aer molecules comprise at most a few percent of the chemoreceptor population yet produce robust motility responses to aerotactic stimuli

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Summary

Introduction

An unorthodox member of the methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein (MCP) family of chemoreceptors, is the major oxygen-sensing transducer in Escherichia coli (5, 19). The four MCPs and Aer have identical trimer contact residues in their signaling domains, and Tar, Tsr, and Trg have been shown to form mixed trimers of dimers in vivo that are believed to comprise discrete signaling teams within the receptor array (23). Nonfunctional as the cell’s sole transducer, these CW-biased mutant Aer proteins regained the ability to mediate aerotactic responses in the presence of MCPs, an effect we term functional rescue. We postulate that MCPrescuable Aer defects (designated Aer-CW) do not abrogate signal transmission through the Aer molecule but rather distort Aer’s prestimulus signal output, producing an inappropriate (CW-biased) swimming pattern According to this model, functional rescue could occur in either of two ways: (i) the presence. Our results indicate that Aer is able to function in the presence of high-abundance, methylation-dependent chemoreceptors by forming mixed signaling teams that may serve to amplify Aer-initiated sensory signals

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