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Activated chemoreceptor arrays remain intact and hexagonally packed

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Thanbichler,  M.
Max Planck Fellow Bacterial Cell Biology, Max Planck Institute for Terrestrial Microbiology, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Briegel, A., Beeby, M., Thanbichler, M., & Jensen, G. J. (2011). Activated chemoreceptor arrays remain intact and hexagonally packed. Molecular Microbiology, 82(3), 748-757. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2958.2011.07854.x.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0007-C1AB-E
Abstract
Bacterial chemoreceptors cluster into exquisitively sensitive, tunable, highly ordered, polar arrays. While these arrays serve as paradigms of cell signalling in general, it remains unclear what conformational changes transduce signals from the periplasmic tips, where attractants and repellents bind, to the cytoplasmic signalling domains. Conflicting reports support and contest the hypothesis that activation causes large changes in the packing arrangement of the arrays, up to and including their complete disassembly. Using electron cryotomography, here we show that in Caulobacter crescentus, chemoreceptor arrays in cells grown in different media and immediately after exposure to the attractant galactose all exhibit the same 12 nm hexagonal packing arrangement, array size and other structural parameters. ΔcheB and ΔcheR mutants mimicking attractant- or repellent-bound states prior to adaptation also show the same lattice structure. We conclude that signal transduction and amplification must be accomplished through only small, nanoscale conformational changes.