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Isolation and behavior of Escherichia coli deletion mutants lacking chemotaxis functions.

John S. Parkinson, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1982 - 
- Vol. 151, Iss: 1, pp 106-113
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TLDR
It is found that deletion mutants lacking both the cheA-cheW and cheY-cheZ functions were required for the anomalous tumbling behavior observed in these mutants, indicating that an important component of the signal transducing machinery may be altered in cheB mutants.
Abstract
Six Escherichia coli che loci (cheA,-B,-R,-W,-Y, and Z) are located in two adjacent operons that map at minute 42 on the chromosome. Point mutants defective in any of these six functions have aberrant swimming patterns and are generally nonchemotactic. Deletions within the two major che gene operons were isolated in order to examine epistatic interactions among these genes. We first constructed a specialized transducing phage (lambda che22), which carries both of the che operons and their associated promoters. Deleted lambda che22 derivatives were selected by chelating agent inactivation, and these derivatives were characterized by mapping them against a series of host strains with point mutations. Representative nonpolar deletions were then transferred into the E. coli chromosome by homologous recombination. Although the phenotype of cheR mutants (smooth swimming) was expected to be epistatic to that of cheB mutants (tumbly swimming), we found that deletion mutants lacking both of these functions exhibited frequent directional changes or tumbling episodes as they swam. An examination of larger deletions indicated that both the cheA-cheW and cheY-cheZ functions were required for the anomalous tumbling behavior observed in these mutants. Loss of the cheB function was also correlated with an inverted behavioral response to sodium acetate, a strong repellent of wild-type cells. These findings indicate that an important component of the signal transducing machinery may be altered in cheB mutants.

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Citations
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Protein phosphorylation and regulation of adaptive responses in bacteria.

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Migration of bacteria in semisolid agar

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References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemotaxis in Escherichia coli analysed by Three-dimensional Tracking

TL;DR: Chemotaxis toward amino-acids results from the suppression of directional changes which occur spontaneously in isotropic solutions.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Gradient-Sensing Mechanism in Bacterial Chemotaxis

TL;DR: It was found, however, that a sudden increase also elicits a response, namely supercoordinated swimming, which demonstrates that chemotaxis is achieved by modulation of the incidence of tumbling both above and below its steady-state value.
Journal ArticleDOI

Charon phages: safer derivatives of bacteriophage lambda for DNA cloning

TL;DR: Three of the Charon vector phages, 3A, 4A, and 16A, have been certified for use as EK2 vector-host systems, when propagated in bulk in a special bacterial host, DP50SupF.
Journal ArticleDOI

Flagellar rotation and the mechanism of bacterial motility.

TL;DR: BACTERIAL flagella are generally composed of three morphologically distinguishable regions: the long flagellar filament, the hook, and the basal structure which is composed of an intricate set of disks and rods attaching the hook to the cell membrane and cell wall.
Journal ArticleDOI

Change in direction of flagellar rotation is the basis of the chemotactic response in Escherichia coli

TL;DR: It is found that changes in the direction of flagellar rotation indeed constitute the basis of chemotaxis: addition of attractants causes counter clockwise (CCW) rotation, whereas repellents causeClockwise (CW) rotation.
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