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Journal of Bacteriology, June 2004, p . 3730-3737, Vol . 186,
No . 12
Methylation-Independent Aerotaxis Mediated by the Escherichia coli Aer
Protein
Sergei I . Bibikov,
Andrew C . Miller,
Khoosheh K . Gosink, and John S . Parkinson*
Biology Department, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah 84112
Received 28 November 2003/ Accepted 30 January 2004
Aer is a membrane-associated protein that mediates aerotactic
responses in Escherichia coli . Its C-terminal half closely resembles
the signaling domains of methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins
(MCPs), which undergo reversible methylation at specific glutamic
acid residues to adapt their signaling outputs to homogeneous
chemical environments . MCP-mediated behaviors are dependent on two
specific enzymes, CheR (methyltransferase) and CheB (methylesterase) .
The Aer signaling domain contains unorthodox methylation sites that
do not conform to the consensus motif for CheR or CheB substrates,
suggesting that Aer, unlike conventional MCPs, might be a
methylation-independent transducer . Several lines of evidence
supported this possibility . (i) The Aer protein was not detectably
modified by either CheR or CheB . (ii) Amino acid replacements at the
putative Aer methylation sites generally had no deleterious effect on
Aer function . (iii) Aer promoted aerotactic migrations on semisolid
media in strains that lacked all four of the E . coli MCPs .
CheR and CheB function had no influence on the rate of aerotactic
movements in those strains . Thus, Aer senses and signals efficiently
in the absence of deamidation or methylation, methylation changes,
methylation enzymes, and methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins . We
also found that chimeric transducers containing the PAS-HAMP sensing
domain of Aer joined to the signaling domain and methylation sites of
Tar, an orthodox MCP, exhibited both methylation-dependent and
methylation-independent aerotactic behavior . The hybrid Aear
transducers demonstrate that methylation independence does not
emanate from the Aer signaling domain but rather may be due to
transience of the cellular redox changes that are thought to trigger
Aer-mediated behavioral responses .
Methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs) mediate many of the
chemotactic behaviors of bacteria and archaea (see references
6 and 20 for recent reviews) . MCPs
typically possess an extracellular ligand-binding domain for
monitoring environmental chemoeffector levels and an intracellular
signaling domain that controls motor responses and undergoes
reversible methylation at multiple sites . Methylation enables MCPs to
detect chemical changes over time by comparing current chemoeffector
levels, reflected in the fraction of ligand-occupied molecules, with
chemoeffector levels during the past few seconds, represented by the
average methylation state of the molecules . Whenever current
conditions differ from those of the recent past, MCPs produce a
feedforward excitation signal that modulates the organism's motility
and a feedback adaptation signal that updates MCP methylation state
to correspond to the new chemical environment (see references
12 and 33 for recent reviews) .
The ability of MCPs to adapt to homogeneous chemical environments via
methylation changes endows these chemoreceptors with a wide dynamic
range for stimulus detection and signaling (45) .
Escherichia coli has four transmembrane MCPs that share a highly
conserved signaling and methylation site domain: Tsr (serine
chemoreceptor), Tar (aspartate and maltose chemoreceptor), Trg
(ribose and galactose chemoreceptor), and Tap (dipeptide chemoreceptor) .
The recently discovered aerotaxis transducer, Aer, also has a
C-terminal MCP-like signaling domain, but it lacks a periplasmic
sensing domain (9, 37) . Instead, Aer has a
central hydrophobic segment that anchors it to the inner face of the
cytoplasmic membrane and an N-terminal cytoplasmic PAS domain that
binds flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) (8,
38) . Aer is thought to produce aerotactic
responses by detecting oxygen-related cellular redox changes with its
FAD prosthetic group (reviewed in reference 50) .
E . coli strains defective in CheR (MCP methyltransferase) and/or
CheB (MCP methylesterase) function exhibit severely impaired
chemotactic responses to stimuli sensed by Tar, Tap, Trg, and Tsr (35,
36, 56), demonstrating that the ability to
modulate methylation state is crucial to those MCP functions . In
contrast, sensory adaptation to aerotactic stimuli appears to be a
methylation-independent behavior in E . coli (30) .
Niwano and Taylor (30) found that cheR
mutants, or wild-type cells depleted of AdoMet by methionine
starvation or cycloleucine treatment, had essentially unaltered
response times for oxygen stimuli . Tar-, Trg-, and Tsr-mediated
responses in the same cells were prolonged, indicating that
methylation-dependent sensory adaptation had been compromised . These
findings suggest that Aer, whose MCP-like signaling domain lacks
conventional methylation site motifs, might be a methylation-independent
transducer .
To determine whether aerotaxis mediated by Aer is a methylation-independent
behavior, we examined Aer for CheR- or CheB-dependent covalent
modifications, assessed Aer function in cheR and cheB mutants,
and examined the behavior of methylation site mutants of Aer .
These studies demonstrated that Aer-mediated aerotaxis was not
dependent on CheR or CheB, on methylatable sites in the signaling
domain, or on any of the conventional MCPs in E . coli . Moreover,
a chimeric transducer containing the Aer sensing domain joined
to the signaling domain and methylation sites of an orthodox MCP
exhibited both methylation-dependent and methylation-independent
aerotactic behavior . These findings indicate that sensory adaptation
can occur at more than one step, and by more than one mechanism, in
the Aer signaling pathway .
Bacterial strains. E . coli K-12 strains used in this
work are listed in Table 1 . All are derivatives of
RP437, our reference wild type for chemotaxis studies (35) .
| TABLE 1 . Strains and plasmids
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Plasmids. Plasmids central to this work are listed in Table
1 . Parental plasmids included pCJ30, an
isopropyl-ß-D-thiogalactopyranoside
(IPTG)-inducible Ptac expression vector (9);
pSB20, a pCJ30 derivative that expresses wild-type aer (9);
and pSB90, a pSB20 derivative that encodes a fully functional Aer
protein with cysteine-to-alanine mutations at the three native
cysteine residues in Aer (8) .
Construction of ygjG::Gm. A gentamicin resistance
(Gm) insertion linked to the aer locus was constructed to
facilitate introduction of chromosomal aer alleles into
various strain backgrounds . The ygjG open reading frame is
adjacent to the promoter-proximal end of aer (10) .
It encodes an ArgF-like protein that is functionally redundant
in E . coli K-12 and causes no tight auxotrophy or other readily
selectable phenotype (A . C . Miller and S . I . Bibikov, unpublished
results) . An internal portion of the ygjG coding region spanning
a BssHI restriction site was PCR amplified from chromosomal DNA
of RP437 . The oligonucleotide primers introduced at the fragment ends
a BamHI site and a PstI site, which were used to clone the 'ygjG'
fragment into the pRSETc vector . The gentamicin resistance gene in
plasmid pBSL142 was excised with MluI and inserted into the
compatible BssHI site of pRSETc-'ygjG' . A linear BamHI-PstI fragment
carrying the Gm insertion and flanking segments of ygjG was
transferred into RP9010 by electroporation, selecting for
gentamicin-resistant transformants . The resulting ygjG::Gm
insertion was 97% linked to the aer locus by P1 generalized
transduction . A
aer-1
ygjG::Gm donor strain (UU1247) was constructed in order to
introduce the
aer-1
mutation into other genetic backgrounds by P1 transduction .
Construction of Aer methylation site mutants. Mutational
changes at the putative methylation sites of Aer were constructed by
oligonucleotide-directed mutagenesis of pSB20, using the QuikChange
mutagenesis kit (Stratagene, La Jolla, Calif.) . Candidate plasmid
mutants were verified by sequencing the entire aer coding
region and adjacent expression signals . Multiple mutants were
constructed by successive rounds of site-directed mutagenesis .
Construction of Aer/Tar chimeras. Aear hybrids were
constructed by PCR amplification of the N-terminal aer coding
segment (codons 1 to 260 and 1 to 269) from pSB90 using the KOD HiFi
DNA polymerase (Novagen, Madison, Wis.) . The PCR primers introduced
an NdeI site at the aer start codon and either an AatII site
(at codon 260) or a BglII site (at codon 269) at the other end of the
coding fragment . The coding segment for the Tar signaling domain (tar
codons 269 to 553 and 278 to 553) was amplified from plasmid pLC113 (4)
with primers that introduced either an AatII site (at codon 269) or a
BglII site (at codon 278) and a BamHI site at the other fragment end .
The aer and tar PCR products were digested with AatII or
BglII, ligated, and then used as a PCR template to amplify the hybrid
gene . The amplified genes were gel isolated and inserted between
the NdeI and BamHI sites of the expression vector pNP1 . Both
chimeric constructs (Aear-260 and Aear-269) were confirmed by
sequencing the entire hybrid coding region .
Behavioral assays. Chemotactic ability was assessed by rate
of colony expansion on semisolid tryptone agar (34) .
Aerotaxis in UU1117 was assessed by colony migration on semisolid
succinate minimal plates (9) . Aerotaxis in UU1250,
UU1249, and UU1535 was assessed by colony migration on semisolid
tryptone agar . Plates were routinely incubated at 30°C .
Isolation of aerotactic pseudorevertants. Plasmid pDM13 was
mutagenized by passage through RP526 and then transformed into
UU1250 . Pooled transformants were spread in a line on the surface of
a semisolid tryptone plate and incubated overnight . Aerotactic
revertants that moved outward from the inoculum were picked for
further analysis .
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) analysis of Aer
modification patterns. Strains containing two compatible plasmids
(pPA144 [Tsr] or pACYC184 [vector] and pSB20 [Aer] or pCJ30 [vector])
were grown at 35°C to early log phase in H1 minimal glycerol medium
(34) containing 1% Casamino Acids, 100 µg of
ampicillin/ml, and 50 µg of chloramphenicol/ml . Cells were harvested
by centrifugation and lysed by boiling in sample buffer (26),
as described previously (4) . Lysate proteins were
analyzed on sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-containing 10 to 20%
polyacrylamide gradient gels (44:0.3, acrylamide/bisacrylamide) and
visualized with an anti-Tsr antibody, essentially as described
previously (4) .
Aer methyl incorporation test. Cells were grown in tryptone
broth at 35°C to mid-log phase and harvested by centrifugation . Cell
pellets were washed twice in motility medium (10 mM potassium
phosphate buffer [pH 7.0], 0.1 mM EDTA, 20 mM sodium lactate)
containing 200 µg of chloramphenicol/ml and resuspended in the same
medium plus 30 µg of puromycin/ml to inhibit protein synthesis . After
incubation for 10 min at 30°C, L-[methyl-3H]methionine
(specific activity, 36 mCi/µmol) was added to a final concentration
of 3 µM . After an additional 45-min incubation at 30°C, cold
trichloroacetic acid was added to a final concentration of 20%, and
the cells were pelleted by centrifugation and washed with 200 µM
acetone at 4°C . Cells were lysed in sample buffer and subjected to
SDS-PAGE, as described previously (19) . Gels were
treated with 2,5-diphenyloxazole solution in dimethyl sulfoxide and
exposed for 30 days, using preflashed film and a fluorescent screen .
Aer is not detectably modified by CheR or CheB. A wild-type Aer
plasmid (pSB20) was expressed in strains with various combinations of
cheR and cheB defects to look for evidence of CheR- or
CheB-dependent modifications . To provide an internal control in those
experiments, the strains also carried a second compatible plasmid
expressing wild-type Tsr, an orthodox MCP . Tsr carries a pentapeptide
sequence (NWETF) at its C terminus that binds to CheR and CheB
molecules and enhances the efficiency of the methylation and
demethylation reactions (7, 55) . Tsr
molecules with this CheR/CheB tether can assist the methylation
reactions of other Tsr molecules in trans (27) and
probably assist other MCP receptors, e.g., Tap and Trg, that do not
have CheR/CheB tethering sites (21,
53) . Thus, we reasoned that if Aer, which lacks the NWETF tail,
was a substrate for either enzyme, Tsr might assist those reactions .
We first looked for Aer modifications in the form of CheR- or
CheB-dependent band shifts in denaturing PAGE . For reasons not well
understood, CheR-promoted methylation increases the SDS-PAGE mobility
of MCP molecules (13, 15,
19), whereas CheB-promoted deamidation and demethylation reduce
their mobility (24, 25,
40, 43) . Although the actual mass changes
are miniscule, the band shifts correspond in magnitude to apparent
molecular mass differences of several thousand Daltons . Under these
gel conditions, Tsr exhibited the expected CheR/CheB-dependent band
shifts (Fig . 1) . In a host with neither CheR nor
CheB function, Tsr migrated as a single band of intermediate mobility
corresponding to the unmethylated, undeamidated form (Fig.
1, lanes 2 and 8) . In a host that lacked CheR
function but had CheB function, Tsr migrated as a single band with
slow mobility, corresponding to the unmethylated, but deamidated,
form (Fig . 1, lanes 3 and 9) . In a host with both
CheR and CheB function, Tsr formed several faster-migrating bands
representing different methylation states (Fig . 1,
lanes 1 and 7) . In contrast, Aer either alone or in the presence of
Tsr migrated as a single major band at the same position in all three
host strains (Fig . 1, lanes 4 to 9) . (A minor,
CheR/CheB-independent band apparent in some of the Aer lanes might
represent a different posttranslational processing event.) These
results suggest that Aer is not modified by CheR and CheB under
physiological conditions where Tsr is modified . However, we cannot
exclude the possibility that Aer undergoes CheR or CheB modifications
that are not detectable as band shifts in the gel electrophoresis
system we used, despite its suitability for other MCPs . To address
this concern, we also attempted to incorporate tritium-labeled methyl
groups (from 3H-methyl methionine via S-adenosyl
methionine) into Aer, using the same strains as in the band shift
experiments . Tsr readily incorporated the methyl label, but Aer did
not (data not shown) . We conclude that if Aer is capable of accepting
methyl groups, it did so below the detection limits of our assay .
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FIG . 1 . Absence of CheR- and CheB-dependent Aer band shifts in SDS-PAGE .
Protein extracts of strains containing pPA144 (Tsr), pSB20 (Aer), or
both plasmids were analyzed on 10 to 20% gradient gels, as described in
Materials and Methods . Tsr and Aer were visualized by Western blotting
with a polyclonal antiserum directed against residues 290 to 470 of the
Tsr signaling domain (2) . Host strains were UU1250
(CheR+ CheB+), UU1535 (CheR– CheB–),
and UU1249 (CheR– CheB+).
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CheR, CheB, and MCPs are not required for aerotaxis. We
constructed three strains with the aer locus as well as the
four conventional MCP loci deleted . One had functional cheR
and cheB genes (UU1250); one contained a deletion of cheR
(UU1249); in one both cheR and cheB (UU1535) were
deleted . A plasmid expressing wild-type Aer under IPTG-inducible
control (pSB20) allowed all three strains to form large colonies on
tryptone semisolid agar containing 50 µM IPTG, the optimal inducer
concentration (Fig . 2) . At lower IPTG levels,
colony size was considerably reduced, whereas at higher inducer
concentrations, colony size remained close to the maximum (data not
shown) . Three lines of evidence argue that colony expansion under
these conditions is driven by aerotactic behavior . (i) The colony
morphology is typical of aerotactic swarms on other media . The
colonies have very sharp borders, indicative of directed movements
rather than random swimming . Moreover, the colonies are dome shaped,
indicating that cells move fastest at the bottom of the agar
where the oxygen gradient, established through cell metabolism,
should be steepest . (ii) Cells expressing mutant forms of Aer, for
example, Aer-D60N, which has an FAD-binding defect in the PAS domain
(8), failed to form large colonies under these conditions
(Fig . 2) . This indicates that Aer sensing and signaling
functions contribute to colony expansion . (iii) Chemotactic responses
promoted by conventional MCPs were abrogated in the cheR- and
cheB-defective hosts . For example, pJC3, a wild-type Tsr plasmid,
failed to mediate serine chemotaxis in the UU1249 and UU1535
backgrounds (Fig . 2) .
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FIG . 2 . Methylation-independent aerotaxis on tryptone semisolid agar
plates . Host strains were UU1250 (CheR+ CheB+),
UU1535 (CheR– CheB–), and UU1249 (CheR–
CheB+); plasmids were pJC3 (Tsr), pCJ30 (vector), pSB20
(Aer), and pSB137 (Aer-D60N) . Plates in the upper row contained 20 µM
IPTG and were incubated at 30°C for 15 h . Plates in the lower row
contained 50 µM IPTG and were incubated at 30°C for 17 h . All plates
contained 50 µg of ampicillin/ml.
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These results show that Aer-mediated aerotaxis can be monitored on
tryptone soft agar in strains that contain no other MCPs . Aer is
evidently able to assemble ternary signaling complexes and modulate
CheA activity with no assistance from other MCP receptors . Moreover,
Aer functions quite well in cheR and cheR cheB hosts,
demonstrating that the MCP deamidation and methylation-demethylation
systems are not crucial to Aer signaling . (The slight differences in
colony size evident in Fig . 2 are probably due to differential
polarity effects of the three tar-tap deletions used to construct
the host strains, but this proposition has not yet been experimentally
tested.)
Aer methylation sites are not required for aerotaxis. The
signaling domain of Aer is similar to that of other MCPs except for
its unorthodox methylation sites (Fig . 3) . The methylation
sites identified in Tar, Tsr, and Trg are typically the second
residue of EE or EQ pairs embedded in characteristic amino acid
tracts; the overall nine-residue methylation site motif is
(A/S)-X-X-E-(E/Q)-X-(A/T/S)-A-(A/S/T) (24,
32, 52) . The few known methylation sites
that deviate from this consensus (e.g., Tsr-502, Tar-491, Trg-310)
are less efficiently methylated (32,
39, 51) . The corresponding positions in
the Aer signaling domain share none of these features: The first
two sites are QQ pairs with atypical neighboring residues; the
third is an NQ pair with orthodox neighbors; the fourth is an EE
pair, but with atypical neighbors; and the fifth is a KH pair with
atypical neighbors .
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FIG . 3 . Methylation regions of Tsr, Tar, Trg, and Aer . Known methylation
sites in Tsr, Tar, and Trg are shown in open boxes marked with their
residue number(s) . The Tar and Trg sites shown in dashed boxes
correspond in position and in sequence motif to the fifth methylation
site of Tsr but are not known to be methylated . Black boxes and white
residue letters indicate the corresponding sites in Aer, below which are
shown the Aer residue numbers, the Aer methylation site designations,
and the mutational replacements made at each site.
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If CheR and CheB are not needed for Aer function, then the methylation
sites in Aer should also be dispensable . To explore this proposition,
we created pairs of mutations (designated 1* to 5*) at each of
the five methylation sites of Aer: Aer site 4 was converted to a DD
pair; the others were converted to AA pairs (Fig . 3) .
These changes are known to eliminate methylation and deamidation
when made at conventional MCP methylation sites (29,
31, 42) . In UU1250, the 1*, 2*,
and 3* mutants retained aerotactic ability, whereas the 4* and 5*
mutants did not (Fig . 4) . Clearly, the first three
methylation sites are not individually crucial to Aer function . In
UU1117, an aer
strain that has the other MCPs, all but the 5* mutant mediated a
robust aerotactic response (Fig . 4) . The ability of
the 4* mutant to function in the presence of other MCPs suggests that
its principal defect is in setting an appropriate swimming pattern .
In UU1117, the high-abundance Tar and Tsr transducers will establish
the swimming pattern, which the Aer 4* mutant can evidently modulate
in response to aerotactic stimuli . The Aer mutant at site 5, the
least orthodox of the methylation sites, is not assisted by other
MCPs, indicating that its defect is more profound . The 5* mutant
protein could be unstable or simply unable to signal properly .
Perhaps wild-type Aer must have basic residues at this position . In
any event, it is highly unlikely that either of the wild-type
residues (K and H) could serve as a substrate site for CheR or CheB .
In contrast, site 3, whose wild-type residues are similarly
unorthodox, tolerated alanine substitutions with no loss in Aer
stability or function .
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FIG . 4 . Aerotaxis promoted by Aer methylation-site mutants . (A)
Plasmid-containing UU1250 colonies on tryptone soft agar plates
containing 50 µM IPTG and incubated for 16 h at 30°C . (B)
Plasmid-containing UU1117 colonies on minimal succinate soft agar (with
no IPTG) and incubated for 22 h at 30°C . Both plates contained 50 µg of
ampicillin/ml . Plasmids in both strain backgrounds were as follows
(reading from left to right): top row, pSB20 (Aer) and pCJ30 (vector
control); middle row, pDM6 (Aer-1*), pDM7 (Aer-2*), and pDM8 (Aer-3*);
bottom row, pDM5 (Aer-4*) and pDM9 (Aer-5*).
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To determine whether Aer methylation sites 1, 2, and 4 are collectively
essential for aerotactic signaling, we constructed a 1*/2*/4*
triple mutant . The triple mutant, like the 4* mutant alone, failed to
mediate aerotaxis in UU1250 (Fig . 5) but functioned
normally in UU1117 (data not shown), where other MCPs can set the
cell's steady-state swimming pattern . This behavior suggests that the
1*/2*/4* triple mutant is fundamentally competent for stimulus
detection and flagellar signaling . To test this idea, we sought Aer
mutations that would allow the Aer 1*/2*/4* mutant to function in
UU1250 . One such phenotypic revertant is shown in Fig .
5 . It retained all three methylation-site lesions but had
acquired a new mutation in the Aer signaling domain (T431M) . Thus,
when assisted by MCPs or by a second-site suppressor mutation in its
own signaling domain, the Aer methylation site triple mutant exhibits
normal aerotactic sensing and signaling ability .
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FIG . 5 . Aerotaxis promoted by a pseudorevertant of the Aer 1*/2*/4*
triple methylation site mutant . Plasmid-containing UU1535 (CheR–
CheB–) colonies were on a tryptone soft agar plate containing
50 µM IPTG and 50 µg of ampicillin/ml . The plate was incubated at 30°C
for 17 h . Plasmids were pSB20 (Aer+), pDM13 (Aer-1*/2*/4*),
and pKG128 (Aer-1*/2*/4*/T431 M).
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Aer-MCP chimeras also exhibit methylation-independent signaling
behavior. To determine whether the methylation-independent signaling
behavior of Aer was correlated with its atypical signaling domain, we
constructed two Aer chimeras that had the signaling domain from
Tar, a methylation-dependent MCP (Fig . 6) . Similar Aer-Tsr
chimeras have been reported (8, 38),
but we chose the Tar signaling domain to avoid potential
complications of Tsr, which also plays a role in aerosensing behavior
(23, 37, 57) . The Aer
and Tar proteins were joined at two homologous positions near the
junction of their HAMP and signaling domains, creating chimeras with
the PAS-HAMP portion of Aer and the signaling domain of Tar,
including its methylation sites and C-terminal CheR/CheB tethering
site (Fig . 6) .
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FIG . 6 . Domain organization and functional features of Aer and Tar and
the positions of join points in Aer-Tar chimeras . The primary structures
of the molecules are drawn to the same scale and aligned at the chimera
join points . In the Aear-260 chimera, Aer residues 1 to 260 were joined
to Tar residues 269 to 553 . In the Aear-269 chimera, Aer residues 1 to
269 were joined to Tar residues 278 to 553.
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Both Aear-260 and Aear-269 supported aerotaxis in UU1535, which lacks
CheR and CheB function, demonstrating that methylation-independent
signaling may emanate from the PAS-HAMP portion of Aer (Fig .
7) . Moreover, Aer and both Aear chimeras produced comparable
migration rates (Fig . 7) at the same optimal expression
level (data not shown), indicating that the Aer and Tar signaling
domains have similar signaling properties in the absence of
CheR and CheB modifications . However, in UU1250, which has CheR and
CheB function, the Aear-269 chimera produced dramatically faster
aerotactic migrations (Fig . 7) . The improved behavior
presumably reflects a contribution from the methylation-dependent
signaling system of Tar . This Aear hybrid may use the feedback-controlled
methylation system to optimize a steady-state swimming pattern
and to assist in sensory adaptation to aerotactic stimuli . The
failure of the Aear-260 chimera to benefit from CheR and CheB
function indicates that the region between Aer residues 260 and 269
is somehow crucial for methylation-dependent signaling in the hybrid
transducers . Paradoxically, this region must come from Aer in order
to confer methylation-dependent signaling behavior on the Aear
hybrid .
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FIG . 7 . Aerotactic signaling by Aer-Tar chimeras . Plasmid-containing
colonies were on tryptone soft agar plates containing 50 µM IPTG and 50
µg of ampicillin/ml . Plates were incubated at 30°C for 15 h . Strains
were UU1535 (CheR– CheB–) and UU1250 (CheR+
CheB+) . Plasmids were pSB20 (Aer), pKG121 (Aear-269), and
pKG119 (Aear-260).
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Our current view of Aer signaling, which incorporates the findings of
the present study, is summarized in Fig . 8 . Aer is thought
to use the FAD bound to its PAS domain as a redox sensor for
detecting changes in environmental levels of oxygen and other
electron acceptors (50) . The PAS domain in turn modulates the
activity of the Aer signaling domain, either directly or through
the intervening F1, membrane anchor, and/or HAMP domains . The
Aer signaling domain resembles that of conventional methyl-accepting
receptors and, like MCPs, appears to be capable of regulating CheA
autophosphorylation, presumably in ternary complexes with the CheW
coupling protein . However, unlike MCPs, Aer signaling and sensory
adaptation are not dependent on methylation changes . Instead, we
suggest that the redox signal sensed by Aer may be the site of
sensory adaptation for aerotaxis, as discussed below .
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FIG . 8 . Current working model of Aer signal transduction . Aer is
anchored to the cytoplasmic side of the inner membrane and probably
monitors respiratory status via redox changes in a component of the
electron transport system (ETS) . Transience of the redox signal could
account for methylation-independent sensory adaptation during aerotaxis,
as discussed in the text.
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Aer-mediated aerotaxis is methylation independent. Three lines
of evidence from this study demonstrate that Aer is a
methylation-independent transducer . (i) The Aer protein was not
detectably modified by either CheR or CheB, the MCP-specific
methyltransferase and methylesterase, respectively . The possibility
remains that Aer carries an undetected modification, perhaps promoted
by a different enzyme . (ii) Aer contains unorthodox methylation sites
that do not conform to the consensus motif for CheR or CheB
substrates . Moreover, replacements at those sites with amino acids
that cannot be deamidated by CheB or methylated by CheR generally had
no deleterious effect on Aer function . Although the site 5 alteration
abolished Aer function, the wild-type residues at that site are the
least likely ones to be CheR/CheB substrates and are probably
important in some other aspect of Aer signaling . (iii) Aer promoted
aerotactic migrations in a strain that lacked MCPs, CheR, and CheB .
Thus, Aer senses and signals efficiently in the absence of
methylation, methylation changes, methylation enzymes, and
methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins .
Methylation-independent sensory adaptation. These findings
are consistent with the work of Niwano and Taylor, who demonstrated
methylation-independent sensory adaptation to oxygen stimuli (30) .
Although our study did not directly examine adaptation behavior, it
seems likely that Aer-mediated cell migrations in soft agar media
require sensory adaptation ability . Thus, the methylation-independent
signaling properties of Aer probably underlie the
methylation-independent adaptive responses observed by Niwano and
Taylor . Because chimeric Aer molecules with the signaling domain of
Tar also mediated aerotaxis in strains lacking CheR and CheB, the
PAS-HAMP portion of Aer may be responsible for
methylation-independent behavior . For example, if the redox signal
detected by Aer were transient, this would provide a simple mechanism
for methylation-independent sensory adaptation in aerotaxis . The
origin of that signal is unknown but most likely involves interaction
between Aer and a component of the electron transport system . ArcB, a
membrane-anchored respiratory monitor that regulates gene expression,
obtains its sensory information from oxidized quinone electron
carriers (22) .
A more general mechanism of methylation-independent sensory
adaptation may also contribute to Aer signaling behavior . Mutants
defective in CheR or CheB function detect and respond to changing
chemoeffector levels, but their responses are prolonged, consistent
with impaired sensory adaptation . However, cheR and cheB mutants
do exhibit slow, partial recoveries from MCP-mediated responses
that imply existence of an inefficient methylation-independent
mechanism of sensory adaptation (11, 36,
46, 48, 56) . The nature
of this secondary adaptation system is unknown . Conceivably, it
could be the primary adaptation system for Aer signaling .
Steady-state swimming pattern influences Aer function. In
the presence of MCPs, Aer, a low-abundance receptor, has little
control over the cell's steady-state swimming pattern . Methylation
enables the MCPs to adjust the cell's swimming pattern for optimal
chemotactic responsiveness . In cheR mutants, unmethylated MCPs
produce low CheA kinase activity and counterclockwise-biased
flagellar rotation . In cheB mutants, overmethylated MCPs produce
high CheA activity and clockwise-biased rotation . Consequently,
although Aer is a methylation-independent transducer, cheR and
cheB mutants that contain MCPs and Aer at their normal expression
levels do not show aerotactic behavior in soft agar media (S .
I . Bibikov and K . Hyland, unpublished results) . In contrast, CheR and
CheB cannot influence the swimming pattern of strains lacking MCPs,
and in such strains Aer alone can establish a swimming pattern
suitable for aerotactic responses . However, proficient behavior
requires Aer expression above normal levels, presumably to compensate
for the lack of other receptors .
The Aer-4* methylation site mutant could not carry out aerotaxis
in UU1250, an MCP-less strain, but exhibited normal aerotaxis in
UU1117, which has other MCPs . This MCP helping effect most likely
reflects the ability, particularly of Tar and Tsr, to set the cell's
swimming pattern via methylation-dependent sensory adaptation . We
designate such Aer mutants bias dependent because they can be seen to
sense and signal normally when the cells are provided with an
appropriate (i.e., roughly wild-type) steady-state flagellar
rotational bias and random-walk swimming pattern . Roughly one-third
of Aer mutants isolated on the basis of aerotaxis defects in UU1250
have proven to be bias dependent (Bibikov and Hyland, unpublished; M .
Burón and J . S . Parkinson, unpublished results) .
The Aear-269 chimeric transducer also exhibited bias-dependent
signaling behavior . In the presence of CheR and CheB, Aear-269
produced rapid aerotactic migrations, whereas in the absence of those
functions, Aear-269 functioned identically to Aear-260 and to Aer .
The CheR/CheB-dependent behavioral enhancement of the Aear-269
chimera could be due to an improved swimming pattern but might also
reflect more efficient gradient tracking via the
methylation-dependent adaptation system . This hybrid transducer may
actually use both methylation-dependent and methylation-independent
modes of adaptation, working in additive or synergistic fashion .
Aerotaxis might be responsible for methylation-independent
chemotaxis. Mutants defective in CheR or CheB function readily acquire
mutations in other components of the chemotaxis machinery that
restore a pseudo-wild swimming pattern and enhance the rate of
migration in soft agar (16, 44,
47) . Part of the speed-up effect is due to the
phenomenon of pseudotaxis, the ability of cells that both run and
tumble to percolate through an agar matrix faster than cells that
incessantly run or tumble (5, 54) . However,
the faster-spreading pseudorevertant colonies also have a sharp
ring at their perimeter suggestive of a chemotactic response (44,
46-48, 54) . Stock and colleagues (46, 47)
have argued that cheR cheB double mutants, which have a
wild-type swimming pattern, use a methylation-independent adaptation
mechanism to move away from repellent compounds produced by the
growing colony . Although controversial, this methylation-independent
chemotaxis appears to be a more purposeful behavior than pseudotaxis
(cf . reference 54) and has never been
satisfactorily explained . Perhaps it is Aer-mediated aerotaxis . As
explained above, aerotaxis can occur in cells lacking CheR and/or
CheB, but only if they have a roughly wild-type swimming pattern, as
the chemotactic pseudorevertants do .
Evolving Aer. The Aer transducer in E . coli functions
best in the presence of MCPs and a methylation-dependent adaptation
system . In the absence of MCPs, Aer mediates much slower aerotactic
migrations than those promoted by the Aear-269 chimera, which has a
methylation-dependent signaling domain . Did the Aer signaling domain
originate from an MCP and subsequently lose its methylation
faculties? Or is Aer a proto-MCP that has not yet acquired
methylation competence? An initial analysis of MCP-like transducers
in microbial genomes indicates that Aer is more likely to be a young
transducer rather than the progenitor of present-day MCPs (I . B .
Zhulin, personal communication) .
Whether the Aear-269 chimera resembles the ancestral Aer transducer
or the next step in Aer evolution, it would seem to be an ideal
subject for studying many Aer-specific signaling questions . For
example: how does Aer monitor the cell's electron acceptor status?
How are Aer input signals relayed to the output domain? How is Aer
signal output modulated by stimulus input? With Aear-269 it should be
possible to avoid bias-dependent signaling lesions in future
aerotaxis mutant hunts, because its methylation-dependent adaptation
system should compensate for most such defects . Alternatively, it
should be possible to isolate Aear-269 mutants in hosts that lack
CheR/CheB function and then test them in other hosts to distinguish
bias-dependent lesions from signal transduction lesions . Finally,
Aear-269 may prove tractable for biochemical studies of the Aer
sensing mechanism, because the Tar signaling domain functions well in
vitro (17, 28, 49) .
We thank Mark Johnson (Loma Linda University) and Igor Zhulin
(Georgia Institute of Technology) for helpful comments on the
manuscript .
This work was supported by research grants GM19559 and GM62904
from the National Institute of General Medical Sciences and by the
University of Utah Research Foundation Funding Incentive Seed Grant
Program . The Protein-DNA Core Facility at the University of Utah
receives support from National Cancer Institute grant CA42014 to the
Huntsman Cancer Institute . A.C.M . received support from the
Bioscience Undergraduate Research Program, Department of Biology,
University of Utah .
* Corresponding author . Mailing address: Biology Department,
University of Utah, 257 South 1400 East, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 . Phone: (801)
581-7639 . Fax: (801) 581-4668 . E-mail: parkinson@biology.utah.edu.
Present address: EMD Biosciences, San Diego, CA 92121 .
Present address: School of Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake
City, UT 84132 .
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