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The chemotaxis signaling pathway, which enables bacteria to follow chemical gradients in their environment, is highly conserved among motile bacteria. It is assumed that Escherichia coli contains the minimal and non-redundant set of protein activities that are necessary for bacterial chemotaxis and nearly universally conserved among bacterial chemotaxis pathways. These include stimulus sensing, signal transduction towards the flagellar motor, and adaptation-based temporal comparisons of the environment. In this study, we show that functionality of the chemotaxis signaling pathway lacking some of its proteins can be partially regained by subjecting E. coli strains to experimental evolution under selection for chemotactic spreading in porous medium. While the core signaling components are indeed essential for the pathway function, the absence of auxiliary pathway proteins required for adaptation and desensitization could be compensated by specific sets of mutations affecting the other pathway components. Further characterization of the evolved strain lacking the adaptation enzyme CheR suggested that this strain utilizes an alternative mechanism of biased drift in chemical gradients, which does not rely on short-term adaptation that is normally considered a prerequisite for bacterial chemotaxis. Although the efficiency of this alternative mechanism remains below the one that can be achieved by the original memory-based chemotaxis strategy of E. coli, it can mediate chemotaxis not only in porous medium but also in liquid. Thus, even short-term experimental evolution of microorganisms can result in the appearance of behavioral strategies that are qualitatively different from those used by parental organisms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1011784 | DOI Listing |
Adv Sci (Weinh)
September 2025
Faculty of Engineering, University of Technology Sydney, P.O. Box 123, Broadway, Sydney, NSW, 2007, Australia.
Microalgae-bacteria symbiosis system is significant for sustainable and low-carbon wastewater treatment, with self-aggregation being key to its stable operation and effective pollutant removal. Cellular motility is the main driving force behind self-aggregation, crucial for symbiosis stability, but the characteristics and patterns involved still remain largely unexplored. Here, cellular movement dynamics into the microalgae-activated sludge model (ASM3) is incorporated, enabling synchronized simulation of metabolic activities and movement behaviors through physical and biochemical interactions in bioreactor systems.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicrobiol Res
September 2025
College of Resources and Environmental Science, State Key laboratory of nutrient use and management, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100193, China. Electronic address:
A comprehensive understanding of the interplay between agricultural practices and the rhizosphere microbiome particularly the role of root exudates is essential for harnessing microbial potential in sustainable agriculture. In this study, we investigated how disease-suppressive soil alters root exudate profiles in pepper plants and how these elevated exudates influence rhizosphere microbiome assembly and modulate the antagonistic activity of Bacillus methylotrophicus 400 (BM400) against Phytophthora capsici. GC-MS analysis identified distinct compositional profiles of root exudates in the disease-suppressive soil, with marked enrichment of seven compounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Phytol
September 2025
Plant-Microbe Interactions, Department of Biology, Science4Life, Utrecht University, P.O. Box 800.56, 3508 TB, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
Plant roots interact with pathogenic and beneficial microbes in the soil. While root defense barriers block pathogens, their roles in facilitating beneficial plant-microbe associations are understudied. Here, we examined the impact of specific root defense barriers on the well-known beneficial association between Arabidopsis thaliana and the plant growth-promoting rhizobacterium Pseudomonas simiae WCS417.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFElife
September 2025
Hefei National Research Center for Physical Sciences at the Microscale and Department of Physics, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei, China.
The opportunistic pathogen serves as a model organism for studying multiple signal transduction pathways. The chemoreceptor cluster, a core component of the chemotaxis pathway, is assembled from hundreds of proteins. The unipolar distribution of receptor clusters has long been recognized, yet the precise mechanism governing their assembly remains elusive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Clin Invest
September 2025
Department of Clinical Laboratory, Children's Hospital of Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing, China.
The persistent challenge of sepsis-related mortality underscores the necessity for deeper insights, with our multi-center cross-age cohort study identifying insulin-like growth factor binding protein 6 (IGFBP6) as a critical regulator in sepsis diagnosis, prognosis, and mortality risk evaluation. Mechanistically, IGFBP6 engages in IGF-independent binding to prohibitin2 (PHB2) on epithelial cells, driving PHB2 tyrosine phosphorylation during sepsis. This process disrupts STAT1 phosphorylation, nuclear translocation, and its recruitment to the CCL2 promoter, ultimately impairing CCL2 transcription and macrophage chemotaxis.
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