Romagnoli S, Armitage J P
Microbiology Unit, Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3QU, United Kingdom.
J Bacteriol. 1999 Jan;181(1):34-9. doi: 10.1128/JB.181.1.34-39.1999.
The response of free-swimming Rhodobacter sphaeroides to increases and decreases in the intensity of light of different wavelengths was analyzed. There was a transient (1 to 2 s) increase in swimming speed in response to an increase in light intensity, and there was a similar transient stop when the light intensity decreased. Measurement of changes in membrane potential and the use of electron transport inhibitors showed that the transient increase in swimming speed, following an increase in light intensity, and the stop following its decrease were the result of changes in photosynthetic electron transport. R. sphaeroides has two operons coding for multiple homologs of the enteric chemosensory genes. Mutants in the first chemosensory operon showed wild-type photoresponses. Mutants with the cheA gene of the second operon (cheAII) deleted, either with or without the first operon present, showed inverted photoresponses, with free-swimming cells stopping on an increase in light intensity and increasing swimming speed on a decrease. These mutants also lacked adaptation. Transposon mutants with mutations in cheAII, which also reduced expression of downstream genes, however, showed no photoresponses. These results show that (i) free-swimming cells respond to both an increase and a decrease in light intensity (tethered cells only show the stopping on a step down in light intensity), (ii) the signal comes from photosynthetic electron transfer, and (iii) the signal is primarily channelled through the second chemosensory pathway. The different responses shown by the cheAII deletion and insertion mutants suggest that CheWII is required for photoresponses, and a third sensory pathway can substitute for CheAII as long as CheWII is present. The inverted response suggests that transducers are involved in photoresponses as well as chemotactic responses.
分析了自由游动的球形红细菌对不同波长光强度增加和降低的反应。随着光强度增加,游动速度会有一个短暂(1至2秒)的增加,而当光强度降低时会有类似的短暂停止。膜电位变化的测量以及电子传递抑制剂的使用表明,光强度增加后游动速度的短暂增加以及光强度降低后的停止是光合电子传递变化的结果。球形红细菌有两个操纵子,编码肠道化学感受基因的多个同源物。第一个化学感受操纵子的突变体表现出野生型光反应。第二个操纵子(cheAII)的cheA基因被删除的突变体,无论第一个操纵子是否存在,都表现出反向光反应,即自由游动的细胞在光强度增加时停止,在光强度降低时游动速度增加。这些突变体也缺乏适应性。然而,cheAII发生突变且下游基因表达也降低的转座子突变体没有光反应。这些结果表明:(i)自由游动的细胞对光强度的增加和降低都有反应(固定细胞仅在光强度降低时表现出停止);(ii)信号来自光合电子传递;(iii)信号主要通过第二条化学感受途径传递。cheAII缺失和插入突变体表现出的不同反应表明,光反应需要CheWII,并且只要CheWII存在,第三条感觉途径可以替代CheAII。反向反应表明,传感器不仅参与趋化反应,还参与光反应。