SIGNAL TRANSDUCTION DURING SWARMER CELL DIFFERENTIATION
Project Number1R01GM057400-01
Contact PI/Project LeaderHARSHEY, RASIKA M
Awardee OrganizationUNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT AUSTIN
Description
Abstract Text
DESCRIPTION: The long term goal of this research is to provide a genetic
framework for understanding the physiological responses of bacteria growing
in surface biofilms. These responses have a large impact on our ecology and
our health. Our model system is the surface-induced swarmer cell
differentiation response discovered in our laboratory in E. coli and S.
typhimurium, and known to be elicited by several flagellated bacteria.
Swarmer cells are generally long and multinucleate, always hyperflagellated,
and can move rapidly over the agar surface in a coordinated manner. There
is evidence that the differentiated swarmer-cell stage of some bacteria
facilitates pathogenic associations with host tissue. Almost nothing is
known about the molecular signaling mechanism of surface sensing. In
organisms in which swarming motility has been studied in some detail, the
chemotaxis system has been shown to play an important role. The specific
aims of this proposal are to understand the mechanism by which the
chemotaxis components participate in surface signal transduction, which
eventually turns on swarmer cell-specific gene expression. We believe that
understanding the genetic basis of swarming in such well-characterized
bacteria as E. coli and S. typhimurium will provide valuable clues to
understanding surface-specific behaviors in other microorganisms.
No Sub Projects information available for 1R01GM057400-01
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