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J. Bacteriol., Sep 1997, 5543-5550, Vol 179, No. 17
TB Morrison and JS Parkinson
CheA, a cytoplasmic histidine autokinase, in conjunction with the CheW
coupling protein, forms stable ternary complexes with the cytoplasmic
signaling domains of transmembrane chemoreceptors. These signaling
complexes induce chemotactic movements by stimulating or inhibiting CheA
autophosphorylation activity in response to chemoeffector stimuli. To
explore the mechanisms of CheA control by chemoreceptor signaling
complexes, we examined the ability of various CheA fragments to interfere
with receptor coupling control of CheA. CheA[250-654], a fragment carrying
the catalytic domain and an adjacent C-terminal segment previously
implicated in stimulatory control of CheA activity, interfered with the
production of clockwise flagellar rotation and with chemotactic ability in
wild-type cells. Epistasis tests indicated that CheA[250-654] blocked
clockwise rotation by disrupting stimulatory coupling of CheA to receptors.
In vitro coupling assays confirmed that a stoichiometric excess of
CheA[250-654] fragments could exclude CheA from stimulatory receptor
complexes, most likely by competing for CheW binding. However,
CheA[250-654] fragments, even in vast excess, did not block
receptor-mediated inhibition of CheA, suggesting that CheA[250- 654] lacks
an inhibitory contact site present in native CheA. This inhibitory target
is most likely in the N-terminal P1 domain, which contains His-48, the site
of autophosphorylation. These findings suggest a simple allosteric model of
CheA control by ternary signaling complexes in which the receptor signaling
domain conformationally regulates the interaction between the substrate and
catalytic domains of CheA.
Copyright © 1997, American Society for Microbiology
A fragment liberated from the Escherichia coli CheA kinase that blocks stimulatory, but not inhibitory, chemoreceptor signaling
Biology Department, University of Utah, Salt Lake City 84112, USA.
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