Phosphorelay of non-orthodox two component systems functions through a bi-molecular mechanism in vivo: the case of ArcB

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Standard

Phosphorelay of non-orthodox two component systems functions through a bi-molecular mechanism in vivo : the case of ArcB. / Jovanovic, Goran; Sheng, Xia; Ale, Angelique; Feliu, Elisenda; Harrington, Heather A; Kirk, Paul; Wiuf, Carsten Henrik; Buck, Martin; Stumpf, Michael P H.

I: Molecular BioSystems, Bind 11, 23.03.2015, s. 1348-1359.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Jovanovic, G, Sheng, X, Ale, A, Feliu, E, Harrington, HA, Kirk, P, Wiuf, CH, Buck, M & Stumpf, MPH 2015, 'Phosphorelay of non-orthodox two component systems functions through a bi-molecular mechanism in vivo: the case of ArcB', Molecular BioSystems, bind 11, s. 1348-1359. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4mb00720d

APA

Jovanovic, G., Sheng, X., Ale, A., Feliu, E., Harrington, H. A., Kirk, P., Wiuf, C. H., Buck, M., & Stumpf, M. P. H. (2015). Phosphorelay of non-orthodox two component systems functions through a bi-molecular mechanism in vivo: the case of ArcB. Molecular BioSystems, 11, 1348-1359. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4mb00720d

Vancouver

Jovanovic G, Sheng X, Ale A, Feliu E, Harrington HA, Kirk P o.a. Phosphorelay of non-orthodox two component systems functions through a bi-molecular mechanism in vivo: the case of ArcB. Molecular BioSystems. 2015 mar. 23;11:1348-1359. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4mb00720d

Author

Jovanovic, Goran ; Sheng, Xia ; Ale, Angelique ; Feliu, Elisenda ; Harrington, Heather A ; Kirk, Paul ; Wiuf, Carsten Henrik ; Buck, Martin ; Stumpf, Michael P H. / Phosphorelay of non-orthodox two component systems functions through a bi-molecular mechanism in vivo : the case of ArcB. I: Molecular BioSystems. 2015 ; Bind 11. s. 1348-1359.

Bibtex

@article{9e324d90cf0045749558001e0d48e147,
title = "Phosphorelay of non-orthodox two component systems functions through a bi-molecular mechanism in vivo: the case of ArcB",
abstract = "Two-component systems play a central part in bacterial signal transduction. Phosphorelay mechanisms have been linked to more robust and ultra-sensitive signalling dynamics. The molecular machinery that facilitates such a signalling is, however, only understood in outline. In particular the functional relevance of the dimerization of a non-orthodox or hybrid histidine kinase along which the phosphorelay takes place has been a subject of debate. We use a combination of molecular and genetic approaches, coupled to mathematical and statistical modelling, to demonstrate that the different possible intra- and inter-molecular mechanisms of phosphotransfer are formally non-identifiable in Escherichia coli expressing the ArcB non-orthodox histidine kinase used in anoxic redox control. In order to resolve this issue we further analyse the mathematical model in order to identify discriminatory experiments, which are then performed to address cis- and trans-phosphorelay mechanisms. The results suggest that exclusive cis- and trans-mechanisms will not be operating, instead the functional phosphorelay is likely to build around a sequence of allosteric interactions among the domain pairs in the histidine kinase. This is the first detailed mechanistic analysis of the molecular processes involved in non-orthodox two-component signalling and our results suggest strongly that dimerization facilitates more discriminatory proof-reading of external signals, via these allosteric reactions, prior to them being further processed.",
author = "Goran Jovanovic and Xia Sheng and Angelique Ale and Elisenda Feliu and Harrington, {Heather A} and Paul Kirk and Wiuf, {Carsten Henrik} and Martin Buck and Stumpf, {Michael P H}",
year = "2015",
month = mar,
day = "23",
doi = "10.1039/c4mb00720d",
language = "English",
volume = "11",
pages = "1348--1359",
journal = "Molecular BioSystems",
issn = "1742-206X",
publisher = "Royal Society of Chemistry",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Phosphorelay of non-orthodox two component systems functions through a bi-molecular mechanism in vivo

T2 - the case of ArcB

AU - Jovanovic, Goran

AU - Sheng, Xia

AU - Ale, Angelique

AU - Feliu, Elisenda

AU - Harrington, Heather A

AU - Kirk, Paul

AU - Wiuf, Carsten Henrik

AU - Buck, Martin

AU - Stumpf, Michael P H

PY - 2015/3/23

Y1 - 2015/3/23

N2 - Two-component systems play a central part in bacterial signal transduction. Phosphorelay mechanisms have been linked to more robust and ultra-sensitive signalling dynamics. The molecular machinery that facilitates such a signalling is, however, only understood in outline. In particular the functional relevance of the dimerization of a non-orthodox or hybrid histidine kinase along which the phosphorelay takes place has been a subject of debate. We use a combination of molecular and genetic approaches, coupled to mathematical and statistical modelling, to demonstrate that the different possible intra- and inter-molecular mechanisms of phosphotransfer are formally non-identifiable in Escherichia coli expressing the ArcB non-orthodox histidine kinase used in anoxic redox control. In order to resolve this issue we further analyse the mathematical model in order to identify discriminatory experiments, which are then performed to address cis- and trans-phosphorelay mechanisms. The results suggest that exclusive cis- and trans-mechanisms will not be operating, instead the functional phosphorelay is likely to build around a sequence of allosteric interactions among the domain pairs in the histidine kinase. This is the first detailed mechanistic analysis of the molecular processes involved in non-orthodox two-component signalling and our results suggest strongly that dimerization facilitates more discriminatory proof-reading of external signals, via these allosteric reactions, prior to them being further processed.

AB - Two-component systems play a central part in bacterial signal transduction. Phosphorelay mechanisms have been linked to more robust and ultra-sensitive signalling dynamics. The molecular machinery that facilitates such a signalling is, however, only understood in outline. In particular the functional relevance of the dimerization of a non-orthodox or hybrid histidine kinase along which the phosphorelay takes place has been a subject of debate. We use a combination of molecular and genetic approaches, coupled to mathematical and statistical modelling, to demonstrate that the different possible intra- and inter-molecular mechanisms of phosphotransfer are formally non-identifiable in Escherichia coli expressing the ArcB non-orthodox histidine kinase used in anoxic redox control. In order to resolve this issue we further analyse the mathematical model in order to identify discriminatory experiments, which are then performed to address cis- and trans-phosphorelay mechanisms. The results suggest that exclusive cis- and trans-mechanisms will not be operating, instead the functional phosphorelay is likely to build around a sequence of allosteric interactions among the domain pairs in the histidine kinase. This is the first detailed mechanistic analysis of the molecular processes involved in non-orthodox two-component signalling and our results suggest strongly that dimerization facilitates more discriminatory proof-reading of external signals, via these allosteric reactions, prior to them being further processed.

U2 - 10.1039/c4mb00720d

DO - 10.1039/c4mb00720d

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25797699

VL - 11

SP - 1348

EP - 1359

JO - Molecular BioSystems

JF - Molecular BioSystems

SN - 1742-206X

ER -

ID: 134986300