| Literature DB >> 33525831 |
Tessa E F Quax1, Sonja-Verena Albers1, Friedhelm Pfeiffer2.
Abstract
Microorganisms can move towards favorable growth conditions as a response to environmental stimuli. This process requires a motility structure and a system to direct the movement. For swimming motility, archaea employ a rotating filament, the archaellum. This archaea-specific structure is functionally equivalent, but structurally different, from the bacterial flagellum. To control the directionality of movement, some archaea make use of the chemotaxis system, which is used for the same purpose by bacteria. Over the past decades, chemotaxis has been studied in detail in several model bacteria. In contrast, archaeal chemotaxis is much less explored and largely restricted to analyses in halophilic archaea. In this review, we summarize the available information on archaeal taxis. We conclude that archaeal chemotaxis proteins function similarly as their bacterial counterparts. However, because the motility structures are fundamentally different, an archaea-specific docking mechanism is required, for which initial experimental data have only recently been obtained.Entities:
Keywords: archaeal proteins; archaellum; chemotaxis; flagella; motility
Year: 2018 PMID: 33525831 PMCID: PMC7289035 DOI: 10.1042/ETLS20180089
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Top Life Sci ISSN: 2397-8554
Figure 1.Schematic representation of the chemotaxis system and its signaling cascade to the bacterial and archaeal motility structures.
As examples, a Gram-negative bacterium and a euryarchaeon are shown. Bacteria present the flagellum at their cell surface. New flagellins travel through the hollow interior of the filament to be added at the tip of the growing structure. In archaea, archaellins are N-terminally processed by PibD, which cleaves upstream of the signal peptide H domain. They are then added to the base of the growing structure, in a similar fashion as for type IV pili. A simplified version of the chemotaxis system is depicted, which shows how signals are transferred via the MCPs and CheW, resulting in autophosphorylation of CheA. The phosphate is transferred from CheA to CheY. In bacteria, phosphorylated CheY diffuses to the base of the flagellum where it binds to the switch complex, resulting in a change in the direction of rotation. In archaea, CheY requires the presence of CheF in order to bind to the archaellum. The exact composition and structural organization of the archaeal switch complex is yet not resolved. MCP, methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein; OM, outer membrane; IM, inner membrane; PG, peptidoglycan. Single letters refer to gene names with the prefix che (Che system) or arl (previously fla) (archaellum system).
Halobacterial transducer proteins: transducer proteins (Htrs, MCPs) from H. salinarum and H. volcanii are listed, together with their protein partners
| htr number | Gene | #TM | Code (locus tag) | Partner | Stimulus | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| htr1 | htrI | 2 | OE3347F | sopI | Attractant: orange light; repellent: UV light | [ |
| htr2 | htrII | 2 | OE3481R | sopII | Repellent: blue light; attractant: amino acid (Ser) | [ |
| htr3 | basT | 2 | OE3611R; HVO_0554 | basB | Branched and sulfur-containing amino acids (Leu, Ile, Val, Met, Cys) | [ |
| htr4 | 2 | OE2189R | – | |||
| htr5 | cosT | 2 | OE3474R | cosB | Compatible osmolytes of betaine family | [ |
| htr6 | 2 | OE2168R | bdgProt | |||
| htr7 | 3 | OE3473F; HVO_1999 | 3TMprot | |||
| htr8 | 6 | OE3167F; HVO_1779 | – | Attractant: oxygen | [ | |
| htr9 | 0 | OE2996R | – | |||
| htr10 | hemAT | 0 | OE3150R; HVO_1484 + HVO_1126 | – | Repellent: oxygen | [ |
| htr11 | car | 0 | OE5243F | – | Arginine | [ |
| htr12 | 0 | OE3070R | – | |||
| htr13 | 0 | OE2474R | – | |||
| htr14 | mpcT | 2 | OE1536R; HVO_0420 | – | Membrane potential | [ |
| htr15 | 0 | OE2392R; HVO_0555 + HVO_3005 | arlD (flaD) | |||
| htr16 | 2 | OE1929R | – | |||
| htr17 | 3 | OE3436R | 3TMprot | |||
| htr18 | 2 | OE2195F | bdgProt | |||
| htr36 | 2 | HVO_2214 | – | |||
| htr37 | 2 | HVO_2462 | CBSdom | |||
| htr38 | 0 | HVO_2220 | – | |||
| htr39 | 1 | HVO_0969 | – |
Locus tags starting with OE are from H. salinarum strain R1 [96], and those starting with HVO_ are from H. volcanii [97]. Partners are encoded in the same operon or gene cluster. ‘bdgProt’ refers to partners which belong to the ABC-type transport system periplasmic substrate-binding protein superfamily. ‘3TMprot’ refers to an uncharacterized partner having three TM domains, while the MCP also has three TM domains. Htrs with both types of locus tags refer to ortholog sets. Htr numbers htr36–htr39 refer to Htrs from H. volcanii which do not have an ortholog in H. salinarum. Htr numbers between htr18 and htr36 are assigned to other species (e.g. Natronomonas pharaonis).