Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiological Sciences, North Dakota State University, Fargo, North Dakota, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Two-component signaling is a specialized mechanism that bacteria use to respond to changes in their environment. Nonpathogenic strains of
Escherichia coli
K-12 harbor 30 histidine kinases and 32 response regulators, which form a network of regulation that integrates many other global regulators that do not follow the two-component signaling mechanism, as well as signals from central metabolism. The output of this network is a multitude of phenotypic changes in response to changes in the environment. Among these phenotypic changes, many two-component systems control motility and/or the formation of biofilm, sessile communities of bacteria that form on surfaces. Motility is the first reversible attachment phase of biofilm development, followed by a so-called swim or stick switch toward surface organelles that aid in the subsequent phases. In the mature biofilm, motility heterogeneity is generated by a combination of evolutionary and gene regulatory events.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
79 articles.
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