2 items tagged with 'dynamic'.
Abstract (Expand)
Many bacteria undergo transitions between environments with differing O₂ availabilities as part of their natural lifestyles and during biotechnological processes. However, the dynamics of adaptation … when bacteria experience changes in O₂ availability are understudied. The model bacterium and facultative anaerobe Escherichia coli K-12 provides an ideal system for exploring this process.
Authors: Eleanor W Trotter, , Andrea M Hounslow, C Jeremy Craven, Michael P Williamson, , ,
Date Published: 27th Sep 2011
Publication Type: Not specified
PubMed ID: 21980479
Citation:
Created: 29th Aug 2012 at 13:50, Last updated: 8th Dec 2022 at 17:26
Abstract (Expand)
Understanding gene regulation requires knowledge of changes in transcription factor (TF) activities. Simultaneous direct measurement of numerous TF activities is currently impossible. Nevertheless, … statistical approaches to infer TF activities have yielded non-trivial and verifiable predictions for individual TFs. Here, global statistical modelling identifies changes in TF activities from transcript profiles of Escherichia coli growing in stable (fixed oxygen availabilities) and dynamic (changing oxygen availability) environments. A core oxygen-responsive TF network, supplemented by additional TFs acting under specific conditions, was identified. The activities of the cytoplasmic oxygen-responsive TF, FNR, and the membrane-bound terminal oxidases implied that, even on the scale of the bacterial cell, spatial effects significantly influence oxygen-sensing. Several transcripts exhibited asymmetrical patterns of abundance in aerobic to anaerobic and anaerobic to aerobic transitions. One of these transcripts, ndh, encodes a major component of the aerobic respiratory chain and is regulated by oxygen-responsive TFs ArcA and FNR. Kinetic modelling indicated that ArcA and FNR behaviour could not explain the ndh transcript profile, leading to the identification of another TF, PdhR, as the source of the asymmetry. Thus, this approach illustrates how systematic examination of regulatory responses in stable and dynamic environments yields new mechanistic insights into adaptive processes.
Authors: , Andrea Ocone, Melanie R Stapleton, Simon Hall, Eleanor W Trotter, , ,
Date Published: 8th Aug 2012
Publication Type: Not specified
PubMed ID: 22870390
Citation:
Created: 29th Aug 2012 at 13:36, Last updated: 8th Dec 2022 at 17:26