Direct mapping from intracellular chemotaxis signaling to single cell swimming behavior.

2020 
Abstract Bacterial chemotaxis allows bacteria to sense chemical environment and modulate their swimming behavior accordingly. Although the intracellular chemotaxis signaling pathway has been studied extensively, experimental studies are still lacking that could provide direct link from the pathway output – the intracellular concentration of the phosphorylated form of the response regulator CheY-P – to single cell swimming behavior. Here, we measured the swimming behavior of individual E. coli cells while simultaneously detecting the intracellular CheY-P concentration, thereby providing direct relationship between the intracellular CheY-P concentration and the single cell run-and-tumble behavior. The measured relationship is consistent with the ultrasensitivity of the motor switch and a “veto model” that describes the interaction among individual flagella, although contribution from the voting mechanism could not be ruled out.
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