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Biophys J, March 2000, p. 1207-1215, Vol. 78, No. 3
Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, South Parks Road, Oxford OX1 3QU, United Kingdom
Rhodobacter sphaeroides can swim toward a
wide range of attractants (a process known as taxis), propelled by a
single rotating flagellum. The reversals of motor direction that cause
tumbles in Eschericia coli taxis are replaced by brief
motor stops, and taxis is controlled by a complex sensory system with
multiple homologues of the E. coli sensory proteins. We
tethered photosynthetically grown cells of R.
sphaeroides by their flagella and measured the response of the
flagellar motor to changes in light intensity. The unstimulated bias
(probability of not being stopped) was significantly larger than the
bias of tethered E. coli but similar to the probability of not tumbling in swimming E. coli. Otherwise, the step
and impulse responses were the same as those of tethered E.
coli to chemical attractants. This indicates that the single
motor and multiple sensory signaling pathways in R.
sphaeroides generate the same swimming response as several
motors and a single pathway in E. coli, and that the
response of the single motor is directly observable in the swimming
pattern. Photo-responses were larger in the presence of cyanide or the
uncoupler carbonyl cyanide 4-trifluoromethoxyphenylhydrazone (FCCP),
consistent with the photo-response being detected via changes in the
rate of electron transport.
Biophys J, March 2000, p. 1207-1215, Vol. 78, No. 3
© 2000 by the Biophysical Society 0006-3495/00/03/1207/09 $2.00
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