Team:Goettingen/Project

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<!-- *** What falls between these lines is the Alert Box!  You can remove it from your pages once you have read and understood the alert *** -->
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{{GoettingenHeader|deu=Team:Goettingen/Project_deu|eng=Team:Goettingen/Project}}
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== Our Project ==
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Our project was born from the idea to create a real champion: the fastest <i>E. coli</i> in the world. As funny as this may sound first,
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<div id="template" style="text-align: center; font-weight: bold; font-size: large; color: #f6f6f6; padding: 5px;">
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soon we were at the development of an ambitious plan to create our "Homing Coli" and apply its speed for selective purposes.
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This is a template page. READ THESE INSTRUCTIONS.
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The ultimate goal was a fast swimming <i>E. coli</i> strain which would be able to recognize specific molecules on a mutagenized
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</div>
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receptor and head towards gradients of these substances on swimming agar plates. If this approach worked, it might be put to use
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<div id="instructions" style="text-align: center; font-weight: normal; font-size: small; color: #f6f6f6; padding: 5px;">
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for the recognition of various molecules such as pollutants, toxins or even cancer cell markers. As our planning moved on, we soon
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You are provided with this team page template with which to start the iGEM season. You may choose to personalize it to fit your team but keep the same "look." Or you may choose to take your team wiki to a different level and design your own wiki. You can find some examples <a href="https://2008.igem.org/Help:Template/Examples">HERE</a>.
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created three different focus groups which should work in parallel on the biggest and most crucial components of our project. <br>
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</div>
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<br>
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<div id="warning" style="text-align: center; font-weight: bold; font-size: small; color: #f6f6f6; padding: 5px;">
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The first group focuses on the creation of effective swimming motility assays. All kinds of different media and swimming agar
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You <strong>MUST</strong> have all of the pages listed in the menu below with the names specified. PLEASE keep all of your pages within your teams namespace.
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plates were to be tested, because fast <i>E. coli</i> can only show their potential under the right conditions. Furthermore, an
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</div>
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efficient selection system should be created in order to separate the fast <i>E. coli</i> from the slower ones and to test potential
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attractants for our swimmers.<br>
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</html>
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<br>
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Creation of a fast strain represents the main task for the second group. The main question here is: which genes have the potential
 +
to make our <i>E. coli</i> faster and how do they need to be regulated to achieve this? Naturally, genes that code for parts of
 +
the bacterial motor, the flagellum, were selected for testing as well as FlhDC, a master regulator for motility and chemotaxis.
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The output is then measured as motility on the first group's swimming plates. <br>
 +
<br>
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The last group focuses on the directed mutagenesis of the aspartate receptor Tar. Thereby, a library of numerous different and new Tar
 +
receptors can be created. Some of these might exhibit the ability to recognize a specific substance of interest. <i>E. coli</i>
 +
strains possessing such mutated receptors can then be screened for homing ability towards a selection of chemical compounds. <br>
 +
<br>
 +
These three groups would focus mostly on their separate projects during the early phases of lab-work and also plan their schedules
 +
independently to minimize frictional losses. But as time progresses and the first results are obtained the work of our focus groups
 +
overlaps more and more in order to achieve our ultimate goal: the creation of Homing Coli.<br>
 +
<br>
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== Chemotaxis ==
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===Sensing and the mechanism of chemotaxis===
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Chemotaxis is a phenomenon whereby cells or organisms direct their orientation or movement in relation to a gradient of
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chemical agents (Fig 1). These chemical agents are known as chemoattractants and chemorepellants, which are inorganic or
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organic substances like amino acids and sugars. They are able to activate chemotaxis in motile cells. This chemotaxis behavior is
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triggered by binding of chemoattractants or chemorepellants to chemotaxis receptors such as the target of our iGEM project, the aspartate receptor Tar.
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[[File:Goe_chemo1.png|700px|thumb|center|<b>Figure 1: Chemotaxis of <i>E. coli</i>.</b> (a) When no attractant is present <i>E. coli</i> switches from direct swimming to tumbling randomly. (b) In the presence of an attractant <i>E. coli</i> moves through the gradient in the direction of the attractant. (Attractant gradient is shown in green.) ]]
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Chemotaxis is based on high-order intracellular signaling structures.
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!align="center"|[[Team:Goettingen|Home]]
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Clustered receptors in the cell wall of bacteria sense signals and mediate downstream signaling in the cell via associated
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!align="center"|[[Team:Goettingen/Team|Team]]
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proteins in a highly cooperative manner [2]. These high-order intracellular signaling structures are also known as two-component systems.
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!align="center"|[https://igem.org/Team.cgi?year=2012&team_name=Goettingen Official Team Profile]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Goettingen/Project|Project]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Goettingen/Parts|Parts Submitted to the Registry]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Goettingen/Modeling|Modeling]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Goettingen/Notebook|Notebook]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Goettingen/Safety|Safety]]
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!align="center"|[[Team:Goettingen/Attributions|Attributions]]
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|}
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[[File:Goe_chemo2neu.jpg|250px|thumb|<b>Figure 2: Schematic structure of a two-component system.</b> A histidine kinase (HK) serves as sensing structure for
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attractants or repellents and mediates downstream signaling to autokinase (red). The response regulator (RR) consists of a receiver
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(purple) and an output module (green) which if activated induces gene expression [2].]]
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A two-component system consists of a sensory histidine kinase and a phosphorylable
 +
response regulator [2] (Fig 1). Transfer of the phosphate group from a histidine residue of the kinase domain to an aspartate
 +
residue of the response regulator activates the output domain. This normally results in activation of gene expression. <br><br>
 +
Beside the aspect that the sensing in <i>E. coli</i> is coupled to flagella-based motion, the two-component system is more complex.
 +
There are five histidine-kinase-associated chemotaxis receptors of <i>E. coli</i> known. The receptors are typically arranged as
 +
a trimeric application of dimeric receptor subunits (trimers of dimers) that are spanning through the membrane.
 +
The receptors are methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) that are directly associated with CheA, a histidine autokinase
 +
and CheW, an adaptor protein that couples CheA to the receptor protein. <br>
 +
There are two conformational states of receptor kinases possible: the kinase-on and kinase-off state [3]. In kinase-off state the
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counter-clockwise (CCW) rotation is active, which leads to forward swimming. In the kinase-on state CheA autophosphorylation is
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activated due to repellent binding whereas in the kinase-off state autophosphorylation is inactive due to attractant binding (Fig 3). <br><br>
 +
In the case of kinase-on state, the autophosphorylated CheA transfers a phosphate group to one of the two response regulators,
 +
CheY and CheB.CheY is responsible for motor control by binding to the flagellar rotary motor. This results in clockwise (CW) rotation,
 +
which is visible as random directional movement. CheZ, a phosphatase, dephosphorylates CheY to keep random movement low (Fig 3). <br><br>
 +
The methylesterase CheB and methyltransferase CheR are counterplayers in sensory adaptation. Here, the MCPs play a crucial role.
 +
Both MCP sites have glutamines in their structure. These are functional mimics of methyl glutamates. In the case of CheB
 +
is bound to a phosphate group from CheA, it mediates deamidation of glutamines to methyl-accepting glutamates. Therefore the
 +
receptor is in the off-state with a high attractant affinity and it is likely to be methylated but not demethylated [3]. Because
 +
the kinetics of methylation and demethylation are relatively slow, adaptation can take tens to hundreds of seconds [2].<br><br>
 +
All in all, <i>E. coli</i> switches from tumbling to swimming when it is surrounded by a gradient of attractants. Increased
 +
attractant stimulation results in both, terminating tumbling and activation of swimming towards the attractants [2].<br>
 +
[[File:Goe_chemo3.png|500px|thumb|center|<b>Figure 3: Molecular mechanism of tumbling and swimming.</b> Activated CheA transfers a phosphate group to CheY
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thus activating clockwise (CW) rotation which leads <i>E. coli</i> tumble. CheZ dephosphorylates CheY to activate counter-clockwise
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(CCW) flagella rotation that results in swimming.]]
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== '''Overall project''' ==
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[[File:Goe_chemo4.png|500px|thumb|center|<b>Figure 4: Structure of <i>E. coli</i> chemoreceptor Tar.</b> Left: Ribbon diagram and chematic show of the 3D structure of Tar [3].
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Right: Detail view of the 3D structure ligand binding domain of Tar (PDB file: 1WAT).]]
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Tell us more about your project. Give us background. Use this is the abstract of your project. Be descriptive but concise (1-2 paragraphs)
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===Tar chemoreceptor of <i>E. coli</i>===
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The aspartate receptor Tar (taxis to aspartate and repellents) is one member of five classical methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins
 +
in <i>E. coli</i> (Aer, Tar, Tsr, Trg and Tap) that mediate chemotactic response. The whole chemoreceptor is build of three parts:
 +
a transmembrane sensing domain, a signal conversion domain and a kinase control domain (Fig 4). The transmembrane sensing domain of
 +
Tar is a four helix bundle where one bundle consists of two antiparallel helices [3]. <br><br>
 +
Tar is able to sense aspartate in a high sensitive manner and a lower sensitivity for glutamate and other compounds is
 +
known [3]. The ligand binding site involves some aminoacid residues of four helices. Binding of the ligand causes a
 +
conformational change. The signal is then transmitted across the membrane through the signal conversion domain to the
 +
kinase control domain (Koshland <i>et al.</i>, 2001) which leads to flagellar motion.<br><br>
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The commonly used bacterial model organism ''Escherichia coli'' possesses lots of beneficial traits like, for example a short generation time or easily accessible genetic manipulation tools. Most ''E. coli'' strains used in laboratories do not exhibit high motility. This is due to a reduction of the bacterial flagellum, which is the crucial element for a motile cell. Our project aims to engineer the bacterium to generate a genetically modified strain that is able to move at a higher velocity. Using directed mutagenesis techniques of motile ''E. coli'' strains their swarming ability should be enhanced.
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=== Sensory molecules ===
 +
Sensory molecules are organic or inorganic agents that can be divided into two groups: chemoattractants and chemorepellents.
 +
Chemoattractants are molecules like aminoacids, organic or inorganic acids, small peptides or chemokines. They induce the active
 +
motion of the bacteria towards the highest concentration of the attractant (Fig 5).
 +
Chemorepellents have a danger signaling function. If bacteria recognize repellents, they swim away from the source of repellents (Fig 5). <br><br>
 +
Sensory molecules can be recognized by various receptors. <i>E. coli</i> has five of these receptors: Aer for sensing
 +
oxygen, Tar for sensing aspartate and repellents, Tsr for sensing serine and repellents, Trg for sensing ribose and galactose
 +
and Tap for sensing dipeptides. Receptors are able to mediate taxis to other sensory molecules as well but with lower affinity.
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Therefore, we try to find new recpetors by mutagenesis of the sensory molecule binding site of Tar.
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The ''flhDC'' operon codes for the master regulator FlhD4C2. This protein complex acts as a transcription factor regulating flagellum biosynthesis and assembly. The increased expression of the master regulator via the introduction of the operon into our ''E. coli'' strain leads to the production of additional flagella and thus to hypermotility compared to usual laboratory strains.
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[[File:Goe_chemo5.png|800px|thumb|center|<b>Figure 5: Reaction of <i>E. coli</i> to chemoattractants and chemorepellents.</b> <i>E. coli</i> swims
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towards the highest concentration of the chemoattractant or away from the highest concentration of the chemorepellent.]]
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To investigate the mobility special “swimming plates” were developed and optimized. These plates contain only a small amount of agar to allow observable movement of the bacterial cells. Furthermore, a second assay introducing a nutrition gradient should trigger a directed movement towards a particular substance. This behavior is called chemotaxis. With these plates in hand, we are able to design an effective motility-selection method.
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Sources:<br>
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The recognition of these substances is accomplished by chemoreceptors. We work with the receptor TAR that specifically recognizes aspartate. The ligand-binding domain of each subunit consists of two short and two long α-helices to form a four-helix bundle. We aim to change the binding specificity of the ligand-binding pocket by using directed mutagenesis techniques. The establishment of a mutation library will hopefully result in the recognition of novel substances.
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[1] Madigan M. T., Martinko J. M., Stahl D. A., Clark D. P. (2012). Brock Microbiology. Vol. 13. Pearson, San Francisco, 78 – 80<br>
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[2] Sourjik V., Armitage J. P. (2010). Spatial organization in bacterial chemotaxis. EMBO J. 29:16, 2724 - 2733<br>
 +
[3] Hazelbauer G. L., Falke J. J., Parkinson J. S. (2008). Bacterial chemoreceptors: high-performance signaling in networked arrays. Trends Biochem Sci. 33:1, 9 - 19<br>
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<br>
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== Poster ==
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In a global perspective, we want to couple substrate sensing (chemotaxis) with motility. Our engineered bacteria could then sense molecules like pollutants or medically relevant substances, like for example cancer markers and move directed and fast towards these.By this means, the targeted substance cannot only be detected but eventually also rendered harmless.
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http://www.patrickreinke.de/igem/poster.png<br>
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== Project Details==
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{{GoettingenFooter}}
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=== Part 2 ===
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=== The Experiments ===
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=== Part 3 ===
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== Results ==
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Latest revision as of 14:48, 21 September 2012

Deutsch  / English 

Contents

Our Project

Our project was born from the idea to create a real champion: the fastest E. coli in the world. As funny as this may sound first, soon we were at the development of an ambitious plan to create our "Homing Coli" and apply its speed for selective purposes. The ultimate goal was a fast swimming E. coli strain which would be able to recognize specific molecules on a mutagenized receptor and head towards gradients of these substances on swimming agar plates. If this approach worked, it might be put to use for the recognition of various molecules such as pollutants, toxins or even cancer cell markers. As our planning moved on, we soon created three different focus groups which should work in parallel on the biggest and most crucial components of our project.

The first group focuses on the creation of effective swimming motility assays. All kinds of different media and swimming agar plates were to be tested, because fast E. coli can only show their potential under the right conditions. Furthermore, an efficient selection system should be created in order to separate the fast E. coli from the slower ones and to test potential attractants for our swimmers.

Creation of a fast strain represents the main task for the second group. The main question here is: which genes have the potential to make our E. coli faster and how do they need to be regulated to achieve this? Naturally, genes that code for parts of the bacterial motor, the flagellum, were selected for testing as well as FlhDC, a master regulator for motility and chemotaxis. The output is then measured as motility on the first group's swimming plates.

The last group focuses on the directed mutagenesis of the aspartate receptor Tar. Thereby, a library of numerous different and new Tar receptors can be created. Some of these might exhibit the ability to recognize a specific substance of interest. E. coli strains possessing such mutated receptors can then be screened for homing ability towards a selection of chemical compounds.

These three groups would focus mostly on their separate projects during the early phases of lab-work and also plan their schedules independently to minimize frictional losses. But as time progresses and the first results are obtained the work of our focus groups overlaps more and more in order to achieve our ultimate goal: the creation of Homing Coli.

Chemotaxis

Sensing and the mechanism of chemotaxis

Chemotaxis is a phenomenon whereby cells or organisms direct their orientation or movement in relation to a gradient of chemical agents (Fig 1). These chemical agents are known as chemoattractants and chemorepellants, which are inorganic or organic substances like amino acids and sugars. They are able to activate chemotaxis in motile cells. This chemotaxis behavior is triggered by binding of chemoattractants or chemorepellants to chemotaxis receptors such as the target of our iGEM project, the aspartate receptor Tar.

Figure 1: Chemotaxis of E. coli. (a) When no attractant is present E. coli switches from direct swimming to tumbling randomly. (b) In the presence of an attractant E. coli moves through the gradient in the direction of the attractant. (Attractant gradient is shown in green.)

Chemotaxis is based on high-order intracellular signaling structures. Clustered receptors in the cell wall of bacteria sense signals and mediate downstream signaling in the cell via associated proteins in a highly cooperative manner [2]. These high-order intracellular signaling structures are also known as two-component systems.

Figure 2: Schematic structure of a two-component system. A histidine kinase (HK) serves as sensing structure for attractants or repellents and mediates downstream signaling to autokinase (red). The response regulator (RR) consists of a receiver (purple) and an output module (green) which if activated induces gene expression [2].

A two-component system consists of a sensory histidine kinase and a phosphorylable response regulator [2] (Fig 1). Transfer of the phosphate group from a histidine residue of the kinase domain to an aspartate residue of the response regulator activates the output domain. This normally results in activation of gene expression.

Beside the aspect that the sensing in E. coli is coupled to flagella-based motion, the two-component system is more complex. There are five histidine-kinase-associated chemotaxis receptors of E. coli known. The receptors are typically arranged as a trimeric application of dimeric receptor subunits (trimers of dimers) that are spanning through the membrane. The receptors are methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) that are directly associated with CheA, a histidine autokinase and CheW, an adaptor protein that couples CheA to the receptor protein.
There are two conformational states of receptor kinases possible: the kinase-on and kinase-off state [3]. In kinase-off state the counter-clockwise (CCW) rotation is active, which leads to forward swimming. In the kinase-on state CheA autophosphorylation is activated due to repellent binding whereas in the kinase-off state autophosphorylation is inactive due to attractant binding (Fig 3).

In the case of kinase-on state, the autophosphorylated CheA transfers a phosphate group to one of the two response regulators, CheY and CheB.CheY is responsible for motor control by binding to the flagellar rotary motor. This results in clockwise (CW) rotation, which is visible as random directional movement. CheZ, a phosphatase, dephosphorylates CheY to keep random movement low (Fig 3).

The methylesterase CheB and methyltransferase CheR are counterplayers in sensory adaptation. Here, the MCPs play a crucial role. Both MCP sites have glutamines in their structure. These are functional mimics of methyl glutamates. In the case of CheB is bound to a phosphate group from CheA, it mediates deamidation of glutamines to methyl-accepting glutamates. Therefore the receptor is in the off-state with a high attractant affinity and it is likely to be methylated but not demethylated [3]. Because the kinetics of methylation and demethylation are relatively slow, adaptation can take tens to hundreds of seconds [2].

All in all, E. coli switches from tumbling to swimming when it is surrounded by a gradient of attractants. Increased attractant stimulation results in both, terminating tumbling and activation of swimming towards the attractants [2].

Figure 3: Molecular mechanism of tumbling and swimming. Activated CheA transfers a phosphate group to CheY thus activating clockwise (CW) rotation which leads E. coli tumble. CheZ dephosphorylates CheY to activate counter-clockwise (CCW) flagella rotation that results in swimming.
Figure 4: Structure of E. coli chemoreceptor Tar. Left: Ribbon diagram and chematic show of the 3D structure of Tar [3]. Right: Detail view of the 3D structure ligand binding domain of Tar (PDB file: 1WAT).

Tar chemoreceptor of E. coli

The aspartate receptor Tar (taxis to aspartate and repellents) is one member of five classical methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins in E. coli (Aer, Tar, Tsr, Trg and Tap) that mediate chemotactic response. The whole chemoreceptor is build of three parts: a transmembrane sensing domain, a signal conversion domain and a kinase control domain (Fig 4). The transmembrane sensing domain of Tar is a four helix bundle where one bundle consists of two antiparallel helices [3].

Tar is able to sense aspartate in a high sensitive manner and a lower sensitivity for glutamate and other compounds is known [3]. The ligand binding site involves some aminoacid residues of four helices. Binding of the ligand causes a conformational change. The signal is then transmitted across the membrane through the signal conversion domain to the kinase control domain (Koshland et al., 2001) which leads to flagellar motion.

Sensory molecules

Sensory molecules are organic or inorganic agents that can be divided into two groups: chemoattractants and chemorepellents. Chemoattractants are molecules like aminoacids, organic or inorganic acids, small peptides or chemokines. They induce the active motion of the bacteria towards the highest concentration of the attractant (Fig 5). Chemorepellents have a danger signaling function. If bacteria recognize repellents, they swim away from the source of repellents (Fig 5).

Sensory molecules can be recognized by various receptors. E. coli has five of these receptors: Aer for sensing oxygen, Tar for sensing aspartate and repellents, Tsr for sensing serine and repellents, Trg for sensing ribose and galactose and Tap for sensing dipeptides. Receptors are able to mediate taxis to other sensory molecules as well but with lower affinity. Therefore, we try to find new recpetors by mutagenesis of the sensory molecule binding site of Tar.

Figure 5: Reaction of E. coli to chemoattractants and chemorepellents. E. coli swims towards the highest concentration of the chemoattractant or away from the highest concentration of the chemorepellent.

Sources:
[1] Madigan M. T., Martinko J. M., Stahl D. A., Clark D. P. (2012). Brock Microbiology. Vol. 13. Pearson, San Francisco, 78 – 80
[2] Sourjik V., Armitage J. P. (2010). Spatial organization in bacterial chemotaxis. EMBO J. 29:16, 2724 - 2733
[3] Hazelbauer G. L., Falke J. J., Parkinson J. S. (2008). Bacterial chemoreceptors: high-performance signaling in networked arrays. Trends Biochem Sci. 33:1, 9 - 19

Poster

http://www.patrickreinke.de/igem/poster.png

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