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1.
We examined the changes in swimming behaviour of the bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides in response to stepwise changes in a nutrient (propionate), following the pre-stimulus motion, the initial response and the adaptation to the sustained concentration of the chemical. This was carried out by tethering motile cells by their flagella to glass slides and following the rotational behaviour of their cell bodies in response to the nutrient change. Computerised motion analysis was used to analyse the behaviour. Distributions of run and stop times were obtained from rotation data for tethered cells. Exponential and Weibull fits for these distributions, and variability in individual responses are discussed. In terms of parameters derived from the run and stop time distributions, we compare the responses to stepwise changes in the nutrient concentration and the long-term behaviour of 84 cells under 12 propionate concentration levels from 1 nM to 25 mM. We discuss traditional assumptions for the random walk approximation to bacterial swimming and compare them with the observed R. sphaeroides motile behaviour.  相似文献   

2.
The phospholipid biosynthetic enzyme activities: CDP-diglyceride synthetase, phosphatidylglycerophosphate synthetase, PGP phosphatase, phosphatidylserine (PS) synthase, PS decarboxylase, and S-adenosyl-L-methionine:phosphatidylethanolamine (AdoMet:PE) N-methyltransferase were detected in crude cell-free extracts of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. CDP-diglyceride synthetase and phosphatidylglycerophosphate synthetase co-enriched with penicillin-binding protein activity, a known cytoplasmic membrane marker, throughout fractionation of cell-free extracts of both chemoheterotrophically and photoheterotrophically grown cells. PS decarboxylase also co-enriched with the cytoplasmic membranes in fractions derived from chemoheterotrophically and photoheterotrophically grown cells, but substantially greater quantities of PS decarboxylase activity was found in the chromatophores derived from photoheterotrophically grown cells than could be accounted for by cytoplasmic membrane contamination of this sample. PS synthase (60% of the recovered activity) and S-adenosyl-L-methionine:phosphatidylethanolamine N-methyltransferase (90% of the recovered activity) were found in the supernatant fraction after high speed centrifugation of crude cell lysates, suggesting that these enzyme activities were not tightly membrane associated. The localization of phospholipid biosynthetic enzyme activity in R. sphaeroides is discussed in terms of the biosynthesis of the photosynthetic membranes.  相似文献   

3.
Abstract The photosynthetic non-sulfur purple bacterium Rhodobacter capsulatus E1F1 can grow on acetate or dl -malate photoheterotrophically under anerobic conditions or chemoheterotrophically in the dark in the presence of dioxygen. Bacterial cells grown under both anaerobic and aerobic conditions exhibited high amounts of the tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes especially in dark-aerobic cultures. A high activity of isocitrate lyase was found in cells of R. capsulatus E1F1 and, to a lesser extent, in those of R. capsulatus IP2, Rhodobacter sphaeroides and Rhodospirillum rubrum grown photoheterotrophically on acetate under anaerobic conditions. The second enzyme of the glyoxylate shunt, malate synthase, appears to be constitutive. Itaconate, a powerful inhibitor of isocitrate lyase, severely inhibited growth of R. capsulatus, R. rubrum and R. sphaeroides on acetate, thus corroborating a physiological role of the enzyme in acetate metabolism by Rhodospirillaceae.  相似文献   

4.
The temporal and spatial behavior of a number of mutants of the photosynthetic, facultative anaerobe Rhodobacter sphaeroides to both step changes and to gradients of oxygen was analyzed. Wild-type cells, grown under a range of conditions, showed microaerophilic behavior, accumulating in a 1.3-mm band about 1.3 mm from the meniscus of capillaries. Evidence suggests this is the result of two signaling pathways. The strength of any response depended on the growth and incubation conditions. Deletion of either the complete chemosensory operons 1 and 2 plus the response regulator genes cheY(4) and cheY(5) or cheA(2) alone led to the loss of all aerotactic responses, although the cells still swam normally. The Prr system of R. sphaeroides responds to electron flow through the alternative high-affinity cytochrome oxidase, cbb(3), controlling expression of a wide range of metabolic pathways. Mutants with deletions of either the complete Prr operon or the histidine kinase, PrrB, accumulated up to the meniscus but still formed a thick band 1.3 mm from the aerobic interface. This indicates that the negative aerotactic response to high oxygen levels depends on PrrB, but the mutant cells still retain the positive response. Tethered PrrB(-) cells also showed no response to a step-down in oxygen concentration, although those with deletions of the whole operon showed some response. In gradients of oxygen where the concentration was reduced at 0.4 micro M/s, tethered wild-type cells showed two different phases of response, with an increase in stopping frequency when the oxygen concentration fell from 80 to 50% dissolved oxygen and a decrease in stopping at 50 to 20% dissolved oxygen, with cells returning to their normal stopping frequency in 0% oxygen. PrrB and CheA(2) mutants showed no response, while PrrCBA mutants still showed some response.  相似文献   

5.
Chemotaxis to many compounds by Rhodobacter sphaeroides requires transport and at least partial metabolism of the chemoeffector. Previous investigations using phototrophically grown cells have failed to find any homologues of the MCP chemoreceptors identified in Escherichia coli. However, using an antibody raised against the highly conserved domain of E. coli Tsr, MCP-like proteins were identified in R. sphaeroides WS8N. Analysis using Western blotting and immunogold electron microscopy showed that expression of these MCP-like proteins is environmentally regulated and that receptors are targeted to two different cellular locations: the poles of the cells and the cytoplasm. In aerobically grown cells, these proteins were shown by immunoelectron microscopy to localize predominantly to the cell poles and to an electron-dense body in the cytoplasm. Western blot analysis indicated a 17-fold reduction in protein concentration when cells were grown in the light. The number of immunogold particles was also dramatically reduced in anaerobically light-grown cells and their cellular distribution was altered. Fewer receptors localized to the cell poles and more particles randomly distributed within the cell, but the cytoplasmic cluster remained. These trends were more pronounced in cells grown anaerobically under dim light than in those grown anaerobically under bright light, suggesting that expression is controlled by redox state and either light intensity or the extent of photosynthetic membrane synthesis. Recent work on E. coli chemosensing suggests that oligomerization of receptors and chemosensory proteins is important for sensory signalling. The data presented here suggest that this oligomerization can occur with cytoplasmic receptors and also provides an explanation for the multiple copies of chemosensory proteins in R. sphaeroides.  相似文献   

6.
Immunoblots of sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gels derived from outer membrane preparations of various strains of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides revealed polypeptides which cross-reacted with antibody directed against the major outer membrane protein of R. sphaeroides 2.4.1. Immunochemical quantitation of the major outer membrane protein of strain 2.4.1 showed approximately 5.5 x 10(4) molecules per cell whether cells were grown chemoheterotrophically or photoheterotrophically. Rhodospirillum rubrum outer membranes contained a cross-reactive protein, whereas the outer membranes derived from Rhodopseudomonas capsulata and Paracoccus denitrificans showed no cross-reaction with the antibody prepared against the major outer membrane protein from R. sphaeroides 2.4.1.  相似文献   

7.
Spirochaeta aurantia M1 cells were grown in a chemostat under conditions of energy and carbon source limitation. The chemotactic responses of the chemostat-grown cells were compared with those of S. aurantia cells grown in batch culture in the presence of excess energy and carbon source. Chemotactic responses were measured by determining the number of cells that entered a capillary tube containing a solution of attractant. S. aurantia cells grown in the chemostat under energy and carbon source limitation exhibited enhanced chemotactic responses and detected lower concentrations of attractant, as compared with cells grown in batch culture. The chemotactic response toward an attractant was specifically enhanced when that attractant was the growth-limiting energy and carbon source. The medium used contained either D-glucose or D-xylose as the sole energy and carbon source. Cells had the greatest chemotactic response toward glucose when grown at a dilution rate (D) of 0.045 h-1 under glucose limitation and toward xylose when grown at D = 0.06 h-1 under xylose limitation. When cells were grown under glucose limitation (D = 0.045 h-1), they sensed concentrations of attractant (glucose) ca. 1,000 times lower than those sensed by batch-grown cells. A similar enhancement of sensing ability (toward xylose) was observed in cells grown under xylose limitation. The results indicated that S. aurantia cells are able to regulate their chemosensory system in response to nutrient limitation. Maximum enhancement of chemotaxis occurs in cells growing at very low concentrations of energy and carbon source. Most likely, this property provides the spirochetes with competitive advantages when the availability of nutrients becomes severely limited in their habitats.  相似文献   

8.
9.
10.
We have identified intrinsic high-level resistance (HLR) to tellurite, selenite, and at least 15 other rare-earth oxides and oxyanions in the facultative photoheterotroph Rhodobacter sphaeroides grown either chemoheterotrophically or photoheterotrophically. Other members of the class Proteobacteria, including members of the alpha-2 and alpha-3 phylogenetic subgroups, were also shown to effect the reduction of many of these compounds, although genera from the alpha-1, beta-1, and gamma-3 subgroups did not express HLR to the oxyanions examined. Detailed analyses employing R. sphaeroides have shown that HLR to at least one class of these oxyanions, the tellurite class (e.g., tellurate, tellurite, selenate, selenite, and rhodium sesquioxide), occurred via intracellular oxyanion reduction and resulted in deposition of metal in the cytoplasmic membrane. The concomitant evolution of hydrogen gas from cells grown photoheterotrophically in the presence of these oxyanions was also observed. HLR to tellurite class oxyanions in R. sphaeroides was not affected by exogenous methionine or phosphate but was reduced 40-fold by the addition of cysteine to growth media. In contrast HLR to the periodate class oxyanions (e.g., periodate, siliconate, and siliconite) was inhibited by extracellular PO4(3-) but did not result in metal deposition or gas evolution. Finally, we observed that HLR to arsenate class oxyanions (e.g., arsenate, molybdate, and tungstate) occurred by a third, distinct mechanism, as evidenced by the lack of intracellular metal deposition and hydrogen gas evolution and an insensitivity to extracellular PO4(3-) or cysteine. Examination of a number of R. sphaeroides mutants has determined the obligate requirement for an intact CO2 fixation pathway and the presence of a functional photosynthetic electron transport chain to effect HLR to K2TeO3 under photosynthetic growth conditions, whereas functional cytochromes bc1 and c2 were required under aerobic growth conditions to facilitate HLR. Finally, a purification scheme to recover metals from intact bacterial cells was developed.  相似文献   

11.
The Rhodobacter sphaeroides genome contains two unlinked genetic regions each encoding a series of proteins involved in CO2 fixation which include phosphoribulokinase (prkA and prkB) and ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rbcLS and rbcR) (P. L. Hallenbeck and S. Kaplan, Photosynth. Res. 19:63-71, 1988; F. R. Tabita, Microbiol. Rev. 52:155-189, 1988). We examined the effect of CO2 in the presence and absence of an alternate electron acceptor, dimethyl sulfoxide, on the expression of rbcR and rbcLS in photoheterotrophically grown R. sphaeroides. The expression of both rbcR and rbcLS was shown to depend on the CO2 concentration when succinate was used as the carbon source. It was also demonstrated that CO2 fixation is critical for photoheterotrophic growth but could be replaced by the alternative reduction of dimethyl sulfoxide to dimethyl sulfide. Dimethyl sulfoxide severely depressed both rbcR and rbcLS expression in cells grown photoheterotrophically at CO2 concentrations of 0.05% or greater. However, cells grown photoheterotrophically in the absence of exogenous CO2 but in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide had intermediate levels of expression of rbcL and rbcR, suggesting partially independent control by limiting CO2 tension. We also present evidence for the existence of two gene products, namely, CfxA and CfxB, which are encoded by genes immediately upstream of rbcLS and rbcR, respectively. Strains were constructed which contained null mutations in cfxA and/or cfxB. Each mutation eliminated expression of the linked downstream rbc operon. Further, studies utilizing these strains demonstrated that each form of ribulose 1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase plays an essential role in maintaining the cellular redox balance during photoheterotrophic growth at differing CO2 concentrations.  相似文献   

12.
T Seay  D R Lueking 《Biochemistry》1986,25(9):2480-2485
A high molecular weight acyl coenzyme A (acyl-CoA) thioesterase, designated thioesterase II, has been purified 5300-fold from photoheterotrophically grown cells of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides. In contrast to R. sphaeroides acyl-CoA thioesterase I [Boyce, S.G., & Lueking, D.R. (1984) Biochemistry 23, 141-147], thioesterase II has a native molecular mass (Mr) of 120,000, is capable of hydrolyzing saturated and unsaturated acyl-CoA substrates with acyl chain lengths ranging from C4 to C18, and is completely insensitive to the serine esterase inhibitor diisopropyl fluorophosphate. Palmitoyl-CoA and stearoyl-CoA are the preferred (lowest Km) saturated acyl-CoA substrates and vaccenoyl-CoA is the preferred unsaturated substrate. However, comparable Vmax values were obtained with a variety of acyl-CoA substrates. Unlike a similar thioesterase present in cells of Escherichia coli [Bonner, W.M., & Bloch, K. (1972) J. Biol. Chem. 247, 3123-3133], R. sphaeroides thioesterase II displays a high ratio of decanoyl-CoA to palmitoyl-CoA activities and exhibits little ability to hydrolyze 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA substrates. Only 3-hydroxydodecanoyl-CoA supported a measurable rate of enzyme activity. With the purification of thioesterase II, the enzymes responsible for greater than 90% of the acyl-CoA thioesterase activity present in cell-free extracts of R. sphaeroides have now been identified.  相似文献   

13.
Alterations in the phospholipid head group composition of most strains of Rhodopseudomonas sphaeroides, as well as Rhodopseudomonas capsulata and Paracoccus denitrificans, occurred when cells were grown in medium supplemented with Tris. Growth of R. sphaeroides M29-5 in Tris-supplemented medium resulted in the accumulation of N-acylphosphatidylserine (NAPS) to as much as 40% of the total whole-cell phospholipid, whereas NAPS represented approximately 28 an 33% of the total phospholipid when R. capsulata and P. denitrificans respectively, were grown in medium containing 20 mM Tris. The accumulation of NAPS occurred primarily at the expense of phosphatidylethanolamine in both whole cells and isolated membranes of R. sphaeroides and had no detectable effect on cell growth under either chemoheterotrophic or photoheterotrophic conditions. Yeast extract (0.1%) and Casamino Acids (1.0%) were found to be antagonistic to the Tris-induced (20 mM) alteration in the phospholipid composition of R. sphaeroides. The wild-type strains R. sphaeroides 2.4.1 and RS2 showed no alteration in their phospholipid composition when they were grown in medium supplemented with Tris. In all strains of Rhodospirillaceae tested, as well as in P. denitrificans, NAPS represented between 1.0 and 2.0% of the total phospholipid when cells were grown in the absence of Tris. [32P]orthophosphoric acid entered NAPS rapidly in strains of R. sphaeroides that do (strain M29-5) and do not (strain 2.4.1) accumulate this phospholipid in response to Tris. Our data indicate that the phospholipid head group composition of many Rhodospirillaceae strains, as well as P. denitrificans, is easily manipulated; thus, these bacteria may provide good model systems for studying the effects of these modifications on membrane structure and function in a relatively unperturbed physiological system.  相似文献   

14.
Involvement of transport in Rhodobacter sphaeroides chemotaxis.   总被引:11,自引:9,他引:2       下载免费PDF全文
The chemotactic response to a range of chemicals was investigated in the photosynthetic bacterium Rhodobacter sphaeroides, an organism known to lack conventional methyl-accepting sensory transduction proteins. Strong attractants included monocarboxylic acids and monovalent cations. Results suggest that the chemotactic response required the uptake of the chemoeffector, but not its metabolism. If a chemoeffector could block the uptake of another attractant, it also inhibited chemotaxis to that attractant. Sodium benzoate was not an attractant but was a competitive inhibitor of the propionate uptake system. Binding in an active uptake system was therefore insufficient to cause a chemotactic response. At different concentrations, benzoate either blocked propionate chemotaxis or reduced the sensitivity of propionate chemotaxis, an effect consistent with its role as a competitive inhibitor of uptake. Bacteria only showed chemotaxis to ammonium when grown under ammonia-limited conditions, which derepressed the ammonium transport system. Both chemotaxis and uptake were sensitive to the proton ionophore carbonyl cyanide m-chlorophenylhydrazone, suggesting an involvement of the proton motive force in chemotaxis, at least at the level of transport. There was no evidence for internal pH as a sensory signal. These results suggest a requirement for the uptake of attractants in chemotactic sensing in R. sphaeroides.  相似文献   

15.
Both aerobically and photosynthetically grown wild-type Rhodobacter sphaeroides swarmed through soft nutrient agar. However, individual aerobically and photosynthetically grown tethered cells showed different responses to steps in concentrations of some attractants. Photosynthetically grown cells showed little response to a step-up in attractant, but large response to a step-down. Aerobically grown cells showed a large but opposite response to a step-up of chemoeffectors such as succinate and aspartate. The responses in che operon deletion mutants were also investigated and indicated that the aerobic response may depend on the protein products of che operon 1.  相似文献   

16.
Rhodobacter sphaeroides only showed chemotaxis towards ammonia if grown under nitrogen-limited conditions. This chemotactic response was completely inhibited by the addition of methionine sulfoximine. There was no effect of methionine sulfoximine treatment on motility or taxis towards propionate, demonstrating that the effect is specific to ammonia taxis. It is known that methionine sulfoximine inhibits glutamine synthetase and hence blocks ammonia assimilation. Methionine sulfoximine does not inhibit ammonia transport in R. sphaeroides; therefore, these results suggest that limited metabolism via a specific pathway is required subsequent to transport to elicit a chemotactic response to ammonia. Bacteria grown on high ammonia show transport but no chemotactic response to ammonia, suggesting that the pathway of assimilation is important in eliciting a chemotactic response.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of propionate toxicity at different pH values (6.5, 7.0, and 8.0) on methanogen-enriched sludge. Methanobrevibacter smithii, and Methanospirillum hungatii was studied. Organisms were grown in Balch medium 3 in Hungate tubes, and toxicity was characterized by a decrease in production of methane and in bacterial numbers. Propionate inhibited bacterial growth and cumulative methane production at concentrations as low as 20 mM. In the absence of propionate, the methanogen-enriched sludge and M. smithii showed better cumulative methane production at pH 6.5 and 7.0 than at pH 8.0. However, in the presence of propionate, these organisms showed better cumulative methane production at pH 8.0. M. hungatii differed in its behavior; the best values of cumulative methane production for this organism occurred at pH 7.0. Bacterial numbers reflected the microbial response to the presence of propionate. The highest counts of methanogenic bacteria were observed at pH 6.5 and 8.0. The numbers of methanogens were affected by the presence of propionate even at concentrations as low as 20 or 30 mM; at propionate concentrations above 80 mM, the methanogen count was affected by at least 2 orders of magnitude. Upon comparison of the responses of the pure cultures and the methanogen-enriched sludge to increasing propionate concentrations, it was found that the sensitivity of the pure cultures was similar to that of the methanogens in the sludge.  相似文献   

18.
The effect of propionate toxicity at different pH values (6.5, 7.0, and 8.0) on methanogen-enriched sludge. Methanobrevibacter smithii, and Methanospirillum hungatii was studied. Organisms were grown in Balch medium 3 in Hungate tubes, and toxicity was characterized by a decrease in production of methane and in bacterial numbers. Propionate inhibited bacterial growth and cumulative methane production at concentrations as low as 20 mM. In the absence of propionate, the methanogen-enriched sludge and M. smithii showed better cumulative methane production at pH 6.5 and 7.0 than at pH 8.0. However, in the presence of propionate, these organisms showed better cumulative methane production at pH 8.0. M. hungatii differed in its behavior; the best values of cumulative methane production for this organism occurred at pH 7.0. Bacterial numbers reflected the microbial response to the presence of propionate. The highest counts of methanogenic bacteria were observed at pH 6.5 and 8.0. The numbers of methanogens were affected by the presence of propionate even at concentrations as low as 20 or 30 mM; at propionate concentrations above 80 mM, the methanogen count was affected by at least 2 orders of magnitude. Upon comparison of the responses of the pure cultures and the methanogen-enriched sludge to increasing propionate concentrations, it was found that the sensitivity of the pure cultures was similar to that of the methanogens in the sludge.  相似文献   

19.
In contrast to the situation in enteric bacteria, chemotaxis in Rhodobacter sphaeroides requires transport and partial metabolism of chemoattractants. A chemotaxis operon has been identified containing homologues of the enteric cheA , cheW , cheR genes and two homologues of the cheY gene. However, mutations in these genes have only minor effects on chemotaxis. In enteric species, CheW transmits sensory information from the chemoreceptors to the histidine protein kinase, CheA. Expression of R. sphaeroides cheW in Escherichia coli showed concentration-dependent inhibition of wild-type behaviour, increasing counter-clockwise rotation and thus smooth swimming — a phenotype also seen when E. coli cheW is overexpressed in E. coli . In contrast, overexpression of R. sphaeroides cheW in wild-type R. sphaeroides inhibited motility completely, the equivalent of inducing tumbly motility in E. coli . Expression of R. sphaeroides cheW in an E. coli Δ cheW chemotaxis mutant complemented this mutation, confirming that CheW is involved in chemosensory signal transduction. However, unlike E. coli Δ cheW mutants, in-frame deletion of R. sphaeroides cheW did not affect either swimming behaviour or chemotaxis to weak organic acids, although the responses to sugars were enhanced. Therefore, although CheW may act as a signal-transduction protein in R. sphaeroides , it may have an unusual role in controlling the rotation of the flagellar motor. Furthermore, the ability of a Δ cheW mutant to swim normally and show wild-type responses to weak acids supports the existence of additional chemosensory signal-transduction pathways.  相似文献   

20.
K C Terlesky  F R Tabita 《Biochemistry》1991,30(33):8181-8186
Two heat-shock proteins that show high identity with the Escherichia coli chaperonin 60 (groEL) and chaperonin 10 (groES) chaperonin proteins were purified and characterized from photolithoautotrophically grown Rhodobacter sphaeroides. The proteins were purified by using sucrose density gradient centrifugation and Mono-Q anion-exchange chromatography. In the presence of 1 mM ATP, the chaperonin 10 and chaperonin 60 proteins bound to each other and comigrated as a large complex during sucrose density gradient centrifugation. The native molecular weights of each protein as determined by gel filtration chromatography were 889,200 for chaperonin 60 and 60,000 for chaperonin 10. Chaperonin 60 is comprised of monomers with a molecular weight of 61,000 and chaperonin 10 is comprised of monomers with a molecular weight of 12,700 as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. Chaperonin 60 was 9.3% of the total soluble cell protein during photolithoautotrophic growth which increased to 28.5% following heat-shock treatment. When cells were grown photoheterotrophically or chemoheterotrophically, chaperonin 60 was reduced to 6.7% and 3.5%, respectively, of the total soluble protein. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of each protein was determined; chaperonin 60 of R. sphaeroides showed 72% identity to E. coli chaperonin 60 protein, and R. sphaeroides chaperonin 10 showed 45% identity with E. coli chaperonin 10. R. sphaeroides chaperonin 60 catalyzed ATP hydrolysis with a specific activity of 134 nmol min-1 mg-1 (kcat = 0.13 s-1) and was inhibited by R. sphaeroides chaperonin 10, but not E. coli chaperonin 10. The E. coli chaperonin 60 ATPase activity was inhibited by chaperonin 10 from both R. sphaeroides and E. coli.  相似文献   

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