Publication | Open Access
High stimulus unmasks positive feedback in an autoregulated bacterial signaling circuit
84
Citations
29
References
2008
Year
Positive FeedbackEnvironmental SignalingMicrobial PathogensBacteriologyMolecular BiologyEscherichia ColiCellular PhysiologyBioenergeticsStrong Positive FeedbackIntercellular CommunicationCell SignalingBiochemistryVirulence FactorHost-microbe InteractionMolecular MicrobiologyProtein PhosphorylationSignal TransductionNatural SciencesPathogenesisMicrobiologySystems BiologyMedicine
We examined the effect of positive autoregulation on the steady-state behavior of the PhoQ/PhoP two-component signaling system in Escherichia coli. We found that autoregulation has no effect on the steady-state output for a large range of input stimulus, which was modulated by varying the concentration of magnesium in the growth medium. We provide an explanation for this finding with a simple model of the PhoQ/PhoP circuit. The model predicts that even when autoregulation is manifest across a range of stimulus levels, the effects of positive feedback on the steady-state output emerge only in the limit that the system is strongly stimulated. Consistent with this prediction, amplification associated with autoregulation was observed in growth-limiting levels of magnesium, a condition that strongly activates PhoQ/PhoP. In a further test of the model, we found that strains harboring a phosphatase-defective PhoQ showed strong positive feedback and considerable cell-to-cell variability under growth conditions where the wild-type circuit did not show this behavior. Our results demonstrate a simple and general mechanism for regulating the positive feedback associated with autoregulation within a bacterial signaling circuit to boost response range and maintain a relatively uniform and graded output.
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