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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Transduction of envelope stress in Escherichia coli by the Cpx two-component system.

Tracy L. Raivio, +1 more
- 01 Dec 1997 - 
- Vol. 179, Iss: 24, pp 7724-7733
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TLDR
The data support a model for Cpx-mediated signal transduction in which the kinase/phosphatase ratio is elevated by stress, and the sequence and phenotypes of periplasmic cpx* mutations suggest that interactions with a periplasmsic signaling molecule may normally dictate a decreased kinase-phosph atase ratio under nonstress conditions.
Abstract
Disruption of normal protein trafficking in the Escherichia coli cell envelope (inner membrane, periplasm, outer membrane) can activate two parallel, but distinct, signal transduction pathways. This activation stimulates the expression of a number of genes whose products function to fold or degrade the mislocalized proteins. One of these signal transduction pathways is a two-component regulatory system comprised of the histidine kinase CpxA and the response regulator, CpxR. In this study we characterized gain-of-function Cpx* mutants in order to learn more about Cpx signal transduction. Sequencing demonstrated that the cpx* mutations cluster in either the periplasmic, the transmembrane, or the H-box domain of CpxA. Intriguingly, most of the periplasmic cpx* gain-of-function mutations cluster in the central region of this domain, and one encodes a deletion of 32 amino acids. Strains harboring these mutations are rendered insensitive to a normally activating signal. In vivo and in vitro characterization of maltose-binding-protein fusions between the wild-type CpxA and a representative cpx* mutant, CpxA101, showed that the mutant CpxA is altered in phosphotransfer reactions with CpxR. Specifically, while both CpxA and CpxA101 function as autokinases and CpxR kinases, CpxA101 is devoid of a CpxR-P phosphatase activity normally present in the wild-type protein. Taken together, the data support a model for Cpx-mediated signal transduction in which the kinase/phosphatase ratio is elevated by stress. Further, the sequence and phenotypes of periplasmic cpx* mutations suggest that interactions with a periplasmic signaling molecule may normally dictate a decreased kinase/phosphatase ratio under nonstress conditions.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Evolution of Two-Component Signal Transduction Systems

TL;DR: Progress made in answering questions about the molecular basis by which two-component proteins evolve is reviewed, highlighting how the integration of genome sequence data with experimental studies is providing major new insights.
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Two-component signal transduction pathways regulating growth and cell cycle progression in a bacterium: a system-level analysis

TL;DR: A system-level investigation of two-component pathways in the model organism Caulobacter crescentus is reported and a new, highly conserved essential signaling pathway from the histidine kinase CenK to the response regulator CenR is identified, which plays a critical role in controlling cell envelope biogenesis and structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Functional characterization in vitro of all two-component signal transduction systems from Escherichia coli.

TL;DR: Using the phosphorylated HKs, trans-phosphorylation in vitro of RRs for all possible combinations was examined, raising the possibility that the cross-talk in signal transduction takes place between two-component systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

The cytoplasmic helical linker domain of receptor histidine kinase and methyl-accepting proteins is common to many prokaryotic signalling proteins

TL;DR: Significant sequence similarities are demonstrated between these regions in numerous histidine kinases, methyl-accepting proteins, adenylyl cyclases and other prokaryotic signalling proteins that possess roles of regulating the phosphorylation or methylation of homodimeric receptors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Periplasmic Stress and ECF Sigma Factors

TL;DR: Prevailing evidence suggests that, in E. coli, a second envelope stress response controlled by the Cpx two-component system ensures proper pilus assembly.
References
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Book

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TL;DR: Molecular Cloning has served as the foundation of technical expertise in labs worldwide for 30 years as mentioned in this paper and has been so popular, or so influential, that no other manual has been more widely used and influential.
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TL;DR: Fusions of lac genes to selected locations on the Escherichia coli chromosome are useful in discovering new types of regulation of gene expression, as was found in the case of the araC gene.
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Transcriptional induction of genes encoding endoplasmic reticulum resident proteins requires a transmembrane protein kinase

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