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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, December 2000, p. 5186-5191, Vol. 66, No. 12
Microbiology Unit, Department of
Biochemistry, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3QU, United Kingdom
Received 4 August 2000/Accepted 24 September 2000
Rhodobacter sphaeroides cells were tethered by their
flagella and subjected to increasing and decreasing nutrient gradients. Using motion analysis, changes in flagellar motor rotation were measured and the responses of the cells to the chemotactic gradients were determined. The steepness and concentration ranges of increasing and decreasing gradients were varied, and the bacterial responses were
measured. This allowed the limits of gradients that would invoke
changes in flagellar behavior to be determined and thus predicts the
nature of gradients that would evoke chemotaxis in the environment. The
sensory threshold was measured at 30 nM, and the response showed
saturation at 150 µM. The study determined that cells detected and
responded to changing concentration rates as low as 1 nM/s for acetate
and 5 nM/s for succinate. The complex sensory system of R. sphaeroides responded to both increasing and decreasing
concentration gradients of attractant with different sensitivities. In
addition, transition phases involving changes in the motor speed and
the smoothness of motor rotation were found.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Behavioral Responses of Rhodobacter
sphaeroides to Linear Gradients of the Nutrients Succinate
and Acetate
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Microbiology
Unit, Department of Biochemistry, University of Oxford, South Parks
Rd., Oxford OX1 3QU, United Kingdom. Phone: 44 1865 275798. Fax: 44 1865 275297. E-mail: packer{at}bioch.ox.ac.uk.
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