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© Research
Publication : Nature communications

Atypical chemoreceptor arrays accommodate high membrane curvature.

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Nature communications - 13 Nov 2020

Muok AR, Ortega DR, Kurniyati K, Yang W, Maschmann ZA, Sidi Mabrouk A, Li C, Crane BR, Briegel A

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 33188180

Link to DOI – 10.1038/s41467-020-19628-6

Nat Commun 2020 Nov; 11(1): 5763

The prokaryotic chemotaxis system is arguably the best-understood signaling pathway in biology. In all previously described species, chemoreceptors organize into a hexagonal (P6 symmetry) extended array. Here, we report an alternative symmetry (P2) of the chemotaxis apparatus that emerges from a strict linear organization of the histidine kinase CheA in Treponema denticola cells, which possesses arrays with the highest native curvature investigated thus far. Using cryo-ET, we reveal that Td chemoreceptor arrays assume an unusual arrangement of the supra-molecular protein assembly that has likely evolved to accommodate the high membrane curvature. The arrays have several atypical features, such as an extended dimerization domain of CheA and a variant CheW-CheR-like fusion protein that is critical for maintaining an ordered chemosensory apparatus. Furthermore, the previously characterized Td oxygen sensor ODP influences CheA ordering. These results suggest a greater diversity of the chemotaxis signaling system than previously thought.