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J. Bacteriol., Jun 1995, 3067-3070, Vol 177, No. 11
U Krohs
Halobacteria usually respond to repellent light stimuli by reversing their
swimming direction. However, cells seem to be in a refractory state when
stimulated immediately after performance of a reversal. I found that in
this case, a special type of response is exhibited rather than spontaneous
behavior. A strong stimulus induced a rhythmic pattern of successive
reversals. On stimulation immediately after a reversal of swimming
direction, the first of these reversals was skipped without influence on
the rhythm. The results suggest that the stimulus evokes an oscillating
signal which alters reversal probability but which is itself independent of
the state of the motor apparatus. The oscillation has a period length of
about 5 s and is damped out within a few cycles. It does not depend on the
special sensory photosystem through which the stimulus is applied. The
consequences of these findings for the model description of swimming
behavior control in halobacteria are discussed.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Damped oscillations in photosensory transduction of Halobacterium salinarium induced by repellent light stimuli
Institut fur Biologische Informationsverarbeitung, Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH, Germany.
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