Affiliation:
1. Department of Anatomy, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
2. Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California
Abstract
ABSTRACT
We describe the use of a computational model to study the effects of cellular architecture and macromolecular crowding on signal transduction in
Escherichia coli
chemotaxis. A newly developed program,
Smoldyn
, allows the movement and interaction of a large number of individual molecules in a structured environment to be simulated (S. S. Andrews and D. Bray, Phys. Biol., in press). With
Smoldyn
, we constructed a three-dimensional model of an
E. coli
cell and examined the diffusion of CheYp from the cluster of receptors to the flagellar motors under control conditions and in response to attractant and repellent stimuli. Our simulations agree well with experimental observations of cell swimming responses and are consistent with the diffusive behavior expected in wild-type and mutant cells. The high resolution available to us in the new program allows us to calculate the loci of individual CheYp molecules in a cell and the distribution of their lifetimes under different cellular conditions. We find that the time delay between stimulus and response differs for flagellar motors located at different positions in the cell. We explore different possible locations for the phosphatase CheZ and show conditions under which a gradient of CheYp exists in the cell. The introduction of inert blocks into the cytoplasm, representing impenetrable structures such as the nucleoid and large protein complexes, produces a fall in the apparent diffusion coefficient of CheYp and enhances the differences between motors. These and other results are left as predictions for future experiments.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
130 articles.
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