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Note: we are switching the order of topics for Lectures 15 & 16. Bacterial Physiology (Micr430). Lecture 15 Bacterial Physiological Adaptation (Text Chapter: 18.1; 18.5; 18.7). GLOBAL CONTROL NETWORK.
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Note: we are switching the order of topics for Lectures 15 & 16 Bacterial Physiology (Micr430) Lecture 15 Bacterial Physiological Adaptation (Text Chapter: 18.1; 18.5; 18.7)
GLOBAL CONTROL NETWORK • A cell must coordinate many different regulatory circuits that control many aspects of cellular physiology in response to changes in the environment - global control • Global regulatory networks include sets of operons and regulons scattered around chromosome
Two-component systems • Bacteria sense and respond to changes in outside world primarily through a network of two-component signal transduction mechanisms • It consists of a sensor/kinase component (usually located on inner membrane) and a regulatory protein component (response regulators) located in the cytoplasm
Two-component Regulatory system Fig. 18.1
Two-component systems • Histidine kinases (HKs) have two domains, an input domain (N-terminal) and a transmitter domain (C-termina) • HK receives a signal at its input domain and autophosphorylates at a histidine residue in its transmitter domain • HK then transfers the phosphoryl group to an aspartate residue in the receiving domain of the partner response regulator
Two-component systems • Response regulators (RRs) also have two domains, a receiver domain (N-terminal) and an output domain (C-terminal) • After obtaining a phosphoryl group from HK, RR is activated and transmits the signal to its target via its output domain • Most of known phosphorylated RRs bind to DNA and stimulate or repress transcription of specific genes
Structures of histidine kinases Fig. 18.2
Two-component systems • The signaling pathway also includes a phosphatase that dephosphorylates the RRs, returning it to the nonstimulated state • The phosphatase may be the histidine kinase itself, the response regulator, or a separate protein • Additional proteins or enzymes may be needed for “two”-component systems that functions as carriers of phosphate – phosphotransferases • This phenomenon is phosphorelay
Response to Inorganic Phosphate Supply: The Pho Regulon • Regulon is a set of noncontiguous operons or genes controlled by a common regulator • Bacteria have evolved a signaling system to induce the formation of phosphate assimilation pathways when the supply of phosphate becomes limiting
Response to Inorganic Phosphate Supply: The Pho Regulon • Under low phosphate conditions, E. coli stimulates transcription of at least 38 genes (most of them in operons) involved in phosphate assimilation • PhoR is HK; PhoB is RR • Pho regulon is controlled by PhoR via PhoB • Phosphorylated PhoB activates transcription of genes in the Pho regulon
Pho signal transduction • Components involved are: • PstS, a periplasmic Pi binding protein • PstA, PstB and PstC, integral membrane proteins required for Pi uptake • PhoU • PhoR, detects Pi, either directly or indirectly • PhoB
Model for regulation of Pho regulon Fig. 18.11
Response to Osmotic Pressure and Temperature • When E. coli is growing in higher osmolarity or at high temperature, the synthesis of the bacterium’s slightly smaller porin channel, OmpC, increases relative to the larger OmpF channel • Smaller OmpC channel is advantageous to the cell when faced with higher osmolarity pressure
Response to Osmotic Pressure and Temperature • EnvZ is an inner membrane histidine kinase that is proposed to be an osmotic sensor • EnvZ is a transmembrane protein, with N-terminal end exposed to periplasm and C-terminal end exposed to cytoplasm • OmpR is the response regulator
Model for regulation of porin synthesis Fig. 18.12