Affiliation:
1. Section of Microbiology, University of California, Davis, California 95616-8665
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The HAMP linker, a predicted structural element observed in sensor proteins from all domains of life, is proposed to transmit signals between extracellular sensory input domains and cytoplasmic output domains. HAMP (histidine kinase, adenylyl cyclase, methyl-accepting chemotaxis protein, and phosphatase) linkers are located just inside the cytoplasmic membrane and are projected to form two short amphipathic α-helices (AS-1 and AS-2) joined by an unstructured connector. The presumed helices are comprised of hydrophobic residues in heptad repeats, with only three positions exhibiting strong conservation. We generated missense mutations at these three positions and throughout the HAMP linker in the
Escherichia coli
nitrate sensor kinase NarX and screened the resulting mutants for defective responses to nitrate. Most missense mutations in this region resulted in a constitutive phenotype mimicking the ligand-bound state, and only one residue (a conserved Glu before AS-2) was essential for HAMP linker function. We also scanned the
narX
HAMP linker with an overlapping set of seven-residue deletions. Deletions in AS-1 and the connector resulted in constitutive phenotypes. Two deletions in AS-2 resulted in a novel reversed response phenotype in which the response to ligand was the opposite of that seen for the
narX
+
strain. These observations are consistent with the proposed HAMP linker structure, show that the HAMP linker plays an active role in transmembrane signal transduction, and indicate that the two amphipathic α-helices have different roles in signal transduction.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
72 articles.
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