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Chemotaxis

Chemotaxis (from chemo- + taxis) is the movement of an organism or entity in response to a chemical stimulus.[1] Somatic cells, bacteria, and other single-cell or multicellular organisms direct their movements according to certain chemicals in their environment. This is important for bacteria to find food (e.g., glucose) by swimming toward the highest concentration of food molecules, or to flee from poisons (e.g., phenol). In multicellular organisms, chemotaxis is critical to early development (e.g., movement of sperm towards the egg during fertilization) and development (e.g., migration of neurons or lymphocytes) as well as in normal function and health (e.g., migration of leukocytes during injury or infection).[2] In addition, it has been recognized that mechanisms that allow chemotaxis in animals can be subverted during cancer metastasis.[3] The aberrant chemotaxis of leukocytes and lymphocytes also contribute to inflammatory diseases such as atherosclerosis, asthma, and arthritis.[4][5][6][7] Sub-cellular components, such as the polarity patch generated by mating yeast, may also display chemotactic behavior.[8]

Capillary tube assay for chemotaxis. Motile prokaryotes sense chemicals in their environment and change their motility accordingly. Absent chemicals, movement is completely random. When an attractant or repellent is present, runs become longer and tumbles become less frequent. The result is net movement towards or away from the chemical (i.e., up or down the chemical gradient). The net movement can be seen in the beaker, where the bacteria accumulate around the origin of the attractant, and away from the origin of the repellent.

Positive chemotaxis occurs if the movement is toward a higher concentration of the chemical in question; negative chemotaxis if the movement is in the opposite direction. Chemically prompted kinesis (randomly directed or nondirectional) can be called chemokinesis.

History of chemotaxis research edit

Although migration of cells was detected from the early days of the development of microscopy by Leeuwenhoek, a Caltech lecture regarding chemotaxis propounds that 'erudite description of chemotaxis was only first made by T. W. Engelmann (1881) and W. F. Pfeffer (1884) in bacteria, and H. S. Jennings (1906) in ciliates'.[9] The Nobel Prize laureate I. Metchnikoff also contributed to the study of the field during 1882 to 1886, with investigations of the process as an initial step of phagocytosis.[10] The significance of chemotaxis in biology and clinical pathology was widely accepted in the 1930s, and the most fundamental definitions underlying the phenomenon were drafted by this time.[by whom?] The most important aspects in quality control of chemotaxis assays were described by H. Harris in the 1950s.[11] In the 1960s and 1970s, the revolution of modern cell biology and biochemistry provided a series of novel techniques that became available to investigate the migratory responder cells and subcellular fractions responsible for chemotactic activity.[12] The availability of this technology led to the discovery of C5a, a major chemotactic factor involved in acute inflammation. The pioneering works of J. Adler modernized Pfeffer's capillary assay and represented a significant turning point in understanding the whole process of intracellular signal transduction of bacteria.[13][14]

Bacterial chemotaxis—general characteristics edit

 
Correlation of swimming behaviour and flagellar rotation

Some bacteria, such as E. coli, have several flagella per cell (4–10 typically). These can rotate in two ways:

  1. Counter-clockwise rotation aligns the flagella into a single rotating bundle, causing the bacterium to swim in a straight line; and
  2. Clockwise rotation breaks the flagella bundle apart such that each flagellum points in a different direction, causing the bacterium to tumble in place.[15]

The directions of rotation are given for an observer outside the cell looking down the flagella toward the cell.[16]

Behavior edit

The overall movement of a bacterium is the result of alternating tumble and swim phases, called run-and-tumble motion.[17] As a result, the trajectory of a bacterium swimming in a uniform environment will form a random walk with relatively straight swims interrupted by random tumbles that reorient the bacterium.[18] Bacteria such as E. coli are unable to choose the direction in which they swim, and are unable to swim in a straight line for more than a few seconds due to rotational diffusion; in other words, bacteria "forget" the direction in which they are going. By repeatedly evaluating their course, and adjusting if they are moving in the wrong direction, bacteria can direct their random walk motion toward favorable locations.[19]

In the presence of a chemical gradient bacteria will chemotax, or direct their overall motion based on the gradient. If the bacterium senses that it is moving in the correct direction (toward attractant/away from repellent), it will keep swimming in a straight line for a longer time before tumbling; however, if it is moving in the wrong direction, it will tumble sooner. Bacteria like E. coli use temporal sensing to decide whether their situation is improving or not, and in this way, find the location with the highest concentration of attractant, detecting even small differences in concentration.[20]

This biased random walk is a result of simply choosing between two methods of random movement; namely tumbling and straight swimming.[21] The helical nature of the individual flagellar filament is critical for this movement to occur. The protein structure that makes up the flagellar filament, flagellin, is conserved among all flagellated bacteria.[22] Vertebrates seem to have taken advantage of this fact by possessing an immune receptor (TLR5) designed to recognize this conserved protein. [23]

As in many instances in biology, there are bacteria that do not follow this rule. Many bacteria, such as Vibrio, are monoflagellated and have a single flagellum at one pole of the cell. Their method of chemotaxis is different. Others possess a single flagellum that is kept inside the cell wall. These bacteria move by spinning the whole cell, which is shaped like a corkscrew.[24][page needed]

Signal transduction edit

 
Domain structure of chemotaxis receptor for Asp

Chemical gradients are sensed through multiple transmembrane receptors, called methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs), which vary in the molecules that they detect.[25] Thousands of MCP receptors are known to be encoded across the bacterial kingdom.[26] These receptors may bind attractants or repellents directly or indirectly through interaction with proteins of periplasmatic space.[27] The signals from these receptors are transmitted across the plasma membrane into the cytosol, where Che proteins are activated.[28] The Che proteins alter the tumbling frequency, and alter the receptors.[28]

Flagellum regulation edit

The proteins CheW and CheA bind to the receptor. The absence of receptor activation results in autophosphorylation in the histidine kinase, CheA, at a single highly conserved histidine residue.[29][better source needed] CheA, in turn, transfers phosphoryl groups to conserved aspartate residues in the response regulators CheB and CheY; CheA is a histidine kinase and it does not actively transfer the phosphoryl group, rather, the response regulator CheB takes the phosphoryl group from CheA.[citation needed] This mechanism of signal transduction is called a two-component system, and it is a common form of signal transduction in bacteria.[citation needed] CheY induces tumbling by interacting with the flagellar switch protein FliM, inducing a change from counter-clockwise to clockwise rotation of the flagellum. Change in the rotation state of a single flagellum can disrupt the entire flagella bundle and cause a tumble.[citation needed]

Receptor regulation edit

 
Signalling pathways of E.coli

CheB, when activated by CheA, acts as a methylesterase, removing methyl groups from glutamate residues on the cytosolic side of the receptor; it works antagonistically with CheR, a methyltransferase, which adds methyl residues to the same glutamate residues.[30] If the level of an attractant remains high, the level of phosphorylation of CheA (and, therefore, CheY and CheB) will remain low, the cell will swim smoothly, and the level of methylation of the MCPs will increase (because CheB-P is not present to demethylate).[30] The MCPs no longer respond to the attractant when they are fully methylated; therefore, even though the level of attractant might remain high, the level of CheA-P (and CheB-P) increases and the cell begins to tumble.[30] The MCPs can be demethylated by CheB-P, and, when this happens, the receptors can once again respond to attractants.[30] The situation is the opposite with regard to repellents: fully methylated MCPs respond best to repellents, while least-methylated MCPs respond worst to repellents.[citation needed] This regulation allows the bacterium to 'remember' chemical concentrations from the recent past, a few seconds, and compare them to those it is currently experiencing, thus 'know' whether it is traveling up or down a gradient. [31] that bacteria have to chemical gradients, other mechanisms are involved in increasing the absolute value of the sensitivity on a given background. Well-established examples are the ultra-sensitive response of the motor to the CheY-P signal, and the clustering of chemoreceptors.[32][33]

Chemoattractants and chemorepellents edit

Chemoattractants and chemorepellents are inorganic or organic substances possessing chemotaxis-inducer effect in motile cells. These chemotactic ligands create chemical concentration gradients that organisms, prokaryotic and eukaryotic, move toward or away from, respectively.[34]

 
float

Effects of chemoattractants are elicited via chemoreceptors such as methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCP).[35] MCPs in E.coli include Tar, Tsr, Trg and Tap.[36] Chemoattracttants to Trg include ribose and galactose with phenol as a chemorepellent. Tap and Tsr recognize dipeptides and serine as chemoattractants, respectively.[36]

Chemoattractants or chemorepellents bind MCPs at its extracellular domain; an intracellular signaling domain relays the changes in concentration of these chemotactic ligands to downstream proteins like that of CheA which then relays this signal to flagellar motors via phosphorylated CheY (CheY-P).[35] CheY-P can then control flagellar rotation influencing the direction of cell motility.[35]

For E.coli, S. meliloti, and R. spheroides, the binding of chemoattractants to MCPs inhibit CheA and therefore CheY-P activity, resulting in smooth runs, but for B. substilis, CheA activity increases.[35] Methylation events in E.coli cause MCPs to have lower affinity to chemoattractants which causes increased activity of CheA and CheY-P resulting in tumbles.[35] In this way cells are able to adapt to the immediate chemoattractant concentration and detect further changes to modulate cell motility.[35]

Chemoattractants in eukaryotes are well characterized for immune cells. Formyl peptides, such as fMLF, attract leukocytes such as neutrophils and macrophages, causing movement toward infection sites.[37] Non-acylated methioninyl peptides do not act as chemoattractants to neutrophils and macrophages.[37] Leukocytes also move toward chemoattractants C5a, a complement component, and pathogen-specific ligands on bacteria.[37]

Mechanisms concerning chemorepellents are less known than chemoattractants. Although chemorepellents work to confer an avoidance response in organisms, Tetrahymena thermophila adapt to a chemorepellent, Netrin-1 peptide, within 10 minutes of exposure; however, exposure to chemorepellents such as GTP, PACAP-38, and nociceptin show no such adaptations.[38] GTP and ATP are chemorepellents in micro-molar concentrations to both Tetrahymena and Paramecium. These organisms avoid these molecules by producing avoiding reactions to re-orient themselves away from the gradient.[39]

Eukaryotic chemotaxis edit

 
Difference of gradient sensing in prokaryotes and eukaryotes

The mechanism of chemotaxis that eukaryotic cells employ is quite different from that in the bacteria E. coli; however, sensing of chemical gradients is still a crucial step in the process.[40][better source needed] Due to their small size and other biophysical constraints, E. coli cannot directly detect a concentration gradient.[41] Instead, they employ temporal gradient sensing, where they move over larger distances several times their own width and measure the rate at which perceived chemical concentration changes.[42][43]

Eukaryotic cells are much larger than prokaryotes and have receptors embedded uniformly throughout the cell membrane.[42] Eukaryotic chemotaxis involves detecting a concentration gradient spatially by comparing the asymmetric activation of these receptors at the different ends of the cell.[42] Activation of these receptors results in migration towards chemoattractants, or away from chemorepellants.[42] In mating yeast, which are non-motile, patches of polarity proteins on the cell cortex can relocate in a chemotactic fashion up pheromone gradients.[44][8]

It has also been shown that both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells are capable of chemotactic memory.[43][45] In prokaryotes, this mechanism involves the methylation of receptors called methyl-accepting chemotaxis proteins (MCPs).[43] This results in their desensitization and allows prokaryotes to "remember" and adapt to a chemical gradient.[43] In contrast, chemotactic memory in eukaryotes can be explained by the Local Excitation Global Inhibition (LEGI) model.[45][46] LEGI involves the balance between a fast excitation and delayed inhibition which controls downstream signaling such as Ras activation and PIP3 production.[47]

Levels of receptors, intracellular signalling pathways and the effector mechanisms all represent diverse, eukaryotic-type components. In eukaryotic unicellular cells, amoeboid movement and cilium or the eukaryotic flagellum are the main effectors (e.g., Amoeba or Tetrahymena).[48][49] Some eukaryotic cells of higher vertebrate origin, such as immune cells also move to where they need to be. Besides immune competent cells (granulocyte, monocyte, lymphocyte) a large group of cells—considered previously to be fixed into tissues—are also motile in special physiological (e.g., mast cell, fibroblast, endothelial cells) or pathological conditions (e.g., metastases).[50] Chemotaxis has high significance in the early phases of embryogenesis as development of germ layers is guided by gradients of signal molecules.[51][52]

Motility edit

Unlike motility in bacterial chemotaxis, the mechanism by which eukaryotic cells physically move is unclear. There appear to be mechanisms by which an external chemotactic gradient is sensed and turned into an intracellular PIP3 gradient, which results in a gradient and the activation of a signaling pathway, culminating in the polymerisation of actin filaments. The growing distal end of actin filaments develops connections with the internal surface of the plasma membrane via different sets of peptides and results in the formation of anterior pseudopods and posterior uropods. Cilia of eukaryotic cells can also produce chemotaxis; in this case, it is mainly a Ca2+-dependent induction of the microtubular system of the basal body and the beat of the 9 + 2 microtubules within cilia. The orchestrated beating of hundreds of cilia is synchronized by a submembranous system built between basal bodies. The details of the signaling pathways are still not totally clear.

Chemotaxis-related migratory responses edit

 
Chemotaxis related migratory responses

Chemotaxis refers to the directional migration of cells in response to chemical gradients; several variations of chemical-induced migration exist as listed below.

  • Chemokinesis refers to an increase in cellular motility in response to chemicals in the surrounding environment. Unlike chemotaxis, the migration stimulated by chemokinesis lacks directionality, and instead increases environmental scanning behaviors.[53]
  • In haptotaxis the gradient of the chemoattractant is expressed or bound on a surface, in contrast to the classical model of chemotaxis, in which the gradient develops in a soluble fluid.[54] The most common biologically active haptotactic surface is the extracellular matrix (ECM); the presence of bound ligands is responsible for induction of transendothelial migration and angiogenesis.
  • Necrotaxis embodies a special type of chemotaxis when the chemoattractant molecules are released from necrotic or apoptotic cells. Depending on the chemical character of released substances, necrotaxis can accumulate or repel cells, which underlines the pathophysiological significance of this phenomenon.

Receptors edit

In general, eukaryotic cells sense the presence of chemotactic stimuli through the use of 7-transmembrane (or serpentine) heterotrimeric G-protein-coupled receptors, a class representing a significant portion of the genome.[55] Some members of this gene superfamily are used in eyesight (rhodopsins) as well as in olfaction (smelling).[56][57] The main classes of chemotaxis receptors are triggered by:

However, induction of a wide set of membrane receptors (e.g., cyclic nucleotides, amino acids, insulin, vasoactive peptides) also elicit migration of the cell.[59]

Chemotactic selection edit

 
Chemotactic selection

While some chemotaxis receptors are expressed in the surface membrane with long-term characteristics, as they are determined genetically, others have short-term dynamics, as they are assembled ad hoc in the presence of the ligand.[60] The diverse features of the chemotaxis receptors and ligands allows for the possibility of selecting chemotactic responder cells with a simple chemotaxis assay By chemotactic selection, we can determine whether a still-uncharacterized molecule acts via the long- or the short-term receptor pathway.[61] The term chemotactic selection is also used to designate a technique that separates eukaryotic or prokaryotic cells according to their chemotactic responsiveness to selector ligands.[62][non-primary source needed][non-primary source needed]

Chemotactic ligands edit

 
Structure of chemokine classes
 
Three dimensional structure of chemokines

The number of molecules capable of eliciting chemotactic responses is relatively high, and we can distinguish primary and secondary chemotactic molecules.[citation needed] The main groups of the primary ligands are as follows:

  • Formyl peptides are di-, tri-, tetrapeptides of bacterial origin, formylated on the N-terminus of the peptide.[citation needed][63] They are released from bacteria in vivo or after decomposition of the cell[ a typical member of this group is the N-formylmethionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine (abbreviated fMLF or fMLP).[citation needed] Bacterial fMLF is a key component of inflammation has characteristic chemoattractant effects in neutrophil granulocytes and monocytes.[citation needed] The chemotactic factor ligands and receptors related to formyl peptides are summarized in the related article, Formyl peptide receptors.
  • Complement 3a (C3a) and complement 5a (C5a) are intermediate products of the complement cascade.[citation needed] Their synthesis is joined to the three alternative pathways (classical, lectin-dependent, and alternative) of complement activation by a convertase enzyme.[citation needed] The main target cells of these derivatives are neutrophil granulocytes and monocytes as well.[citation needed]
  • Chemokines belong to a special class of cytokines; not only do their groups (C, CC, CXC, CX3C chemokines) represent structurally related molecules with a special arrangement of disulfide bridges but also their target cell specificity is diverse.[citation needed] CC chemokines act on monocytes (e.g., RANTES), and CXC chemokines are neutrophil granulocyte-specific (e.g., IL-8).[citation needed] Investigations of the three-dimensional structures of chemokines provided evidence that a characteristic composition of beta-sheets and an alpha helix provides expression of sequences required for interaction with the chemokine receptors.[citation needed] Formation of dimers and their increased biological activity was demonstrated by crystallography of several chemokines, e.g. IL-8.[citation needed]
  • Metabolites of polyunsaturated fatty acids

Chemotactic range fitting edit

 
Chemotactic range fitting

Chemotactic responses elicited by ligand-receptor interactions vary with the concentration of the ligand. Investigations of ligand families (e.g. amino acids or oligopeptides) demonstrates that chemoattractant activity occurs over a wide range, while chemorepellent activities have narrow ranges.[69]

Clinical significance edit

A changed migratory potential of cells has relatively high importance in the development of several clinical symptoms and syndromes. Altered chemotactic activity of extracellular (e.g., Escherichia coli) or intracellular (e.g., Listeria monocytogenes) pathogens itself represents a significant clinical target. Modification of endogenous chemotactic ability of these microorganisms by pharmaceutical agents can decrease or inhibit the ratio of infections or spreading of infectious diseases. Apart from infections, there are some other diseases wherein impaired chemotaxis is the primary etiological factor, as in Chédiak–Higashi syndrome, where giant intracellular vesicles inhibit normal migration of cells.

Chemotaxis in diseases[citation needed]
Type of disease Chemotaxis increased Chemotaxis decreased
Infections Inflammations AIDS, Brucellosis
Chemotaxis results in the disease Chédiak–Higashi syndrome, Kartagener syndrome
Chemotaxis is affected Atherosclerosis, arthritis, periodontitis, psoriasis, reperfusion injury, metastatic tumors Multiple sclerosis, Hodgkin disease, male infertility
Intoxications Asbestos, benzpyrene Hg and Cr salts, ozone

Mathematical models edit

Several mathematical models of chemotaxis were developed depending on the type of

  • Migration (e.g., basic differences of bacterial swimming, movement of unicellular eukaryotes with cilia/flagellum and amoeboid migration)
  • Physico-chemical characteristics of the chemicals (e.g., diffusion) working as ligands
  • Biological characteristics of the ligands (attractant, neutral, and repellent molecules)
  • Assay systems applied to evaluate chemotaxis (see incubation times, development, and stability of concentration gradients)
  • Other environmental effects possessing direct or indirect influence on the migration (lighting, temperature, magnetic fields, etc.)

Although interactions of the factors listed above make the behavior of the solutions of mathematical models of chemotaxis rather complex, it is possible to describe the basic phenomenon of chemotaxis-driven motion in a straightforward way. Indeed, let us denote with   the spatially non-uniform concentration of the chemo-attractant and   as its gradient. Then the chemotactic cellular flow (also called current)   that is generated by the chemotaxis is linked to the above gradient by the law:[70]

 

where   is the spatial density of the cells and   is the so-called 'Chemotactic coefficient' -   is often not constant, but a decreasing function of the chemo-attractant. For some quantity   that is subject to total flux   and generation/destruction term  , it is possible to formulate a continuity equation:

 

where   is the divergence. This general equation applies to both the cell density and the chemo-attractant. Therefore, incorporating a diffusion flux into the total flux term, the interactions between these quantities are governed by a set of coupled reaction-diffusion partial differential equations describing the change in   and  :[70]

 

where   describes the growth in cell density,   is the kinetics/source term for the chemo-attractant, and the diffusion coefficients for cell density and the chemo-attractant are respectively   and  .

Spatial ecology of soil microorganisms is a function of their chemotactic sensitivities towards substrate and fellow organisms.[71][non-primary source needed][non-primary source needed] The chemotactic behavior of the bacteria was proven to lead to non-trivial population patterns even in the absence of environmental heterogeneities. The presence of structural pore scale heterogeneities has an extra impact on the emerging bacterial patterns.

Measurement of chemotaxis edit

A wide range of techniques is available to evaluate chemotactic activity of cells or the chemoattractant and chemorepellent character of ligands. The basic requirements of the measurement are as follows:

  • Concentration gradients can develop relatively quickly and persist for a long time in the system
  • Chemotactic and chemokinetic activities are distinguished
  • Migration of cells is free toward and away on the axis of the concentration gradient
  • Detected responses are the results of active migration of cells

Despite the fact that an ideal chemotaxis assay is still not available, there are several protocols and pieces of equipment that offer good correspondence with the conditions described above. The most commonly used are summarised in the table below:

Type of assay Agar-plate assays Two-chamber assays Others
Examples
  • PP-chamber
  • Boyden chamber
  • Zigmond chamber
  • Dunn chambers
  • Multi-well chambers
  • Capillary techniques
  • T-maze technique
  • Opalescence technique
  • Orientation assays

Artificial chemotactic systems edit

Chemical robots that use artificial chemotaxis to navigate autonomously have been designed.[72][73] Applications include targeted delivery of drugs in the body.[74] More recently, enzyme molecules have also shown positive chemotactic behavior in the gradient of their substrates.[75] The thermodynamically-favorable binding of enzymes to their specific substrates is recognized as the origin of enzymatic chemotaxis.[76] Additionally, enzymes in cascades have also shown substrate-driven chemotactic aggregation.[77]

Apart from active enzymes, non-reacting molecules also show chemotactic behavior. This has been demonstrated by using dye molecules that move directionally in gradients of polymer solution through favorable hydrophobic interactions.[78]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Alberts B, Johnson A, Lewis J, Walter P, Raff MC (2002). "Bacterial Chemotaxis Depends on a Two-Component Signaling Pathway Activated by Histidine-Kinase-associated Receptors". Molecular Biology of the Cell. Taylor & Francis Group. ISBN 978-0-8153-4069-0. Retrieved 18 September 2017.
  • Bagorda A, Parent CA (August 2008). "Eukaryotic chemotaxis at a glance". Journal of Cell Science. 121 (Pt 16): 2621–4. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.515.32. doi:10.1242/jcs.018077. PMC 7213762. PMID 18685153.
  • Berg HC (1993). Random walks in biology (Expanded, rev. ed.). Princeton, NJ: Princeton Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00064-0.
  • Berg HC (2003). E. coli in motion. Vol. 58. New York: Springer. pp. 64–65. Bibcode:2005PhT....58b..64B. doi:10.1063/1.1897527. ISBN 978-0-387-00888-2. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Dusenbery DB (2009). Living at micro scale : the unexpected physics of being small. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-03116-6.
  • Eisenbach M (2004). Lengeler JW (ed.). Chemotaxis. London: Imperial College Press. ISBN 978-1-86094-413-0.
  • Eisenbach, Michael (December 2011). "Bacterial Chemotaxis". Encyclopedia of Life Sciences. doi:10.1002/9780470015902.a0001251.pub3. ISBN 978-0470016176. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Hazelbauer GL (13 October 2012). "Bacterial chemotaxis: the early years of molecular studies". Annual Review of Microbiology. 66 (1): 285–303. doi:10.1146/annurev-micro-092611-150120. PMC 3989901. PMID 22994495.
  • Jin T, Hereld D (2016). Chemotaxis: Methods and Protocols. Humana Press. ISBN 978-1-4939-3480-5.
  • Miller LD, Russell MH, Alexandre G (2009). Diversity in bacterial chemotactic responses and niche adaptation. Vol. 66. pp. 53–75. doi:10.1016/S0065-2164(08)00803-4. ISBN 9780123747884. PMID 19203648. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
  • Rao CV, Kirby JR, Arkin AP (February 2004). "Design and diversity in bacterial chemotaxis: a comparative study in Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis". PLOS Biology. 2 (2): E49. doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.0020049. PMC 340952. PMID 14966542.
  • Williams AH (20 December 2010). "Chemotaxis on the move - active learning teaching tool". Journal of Microbiology & Biology Education. 11 (2): 177–8. doi:10.1128/jmbe.v11i2.216. PMC 3577161. PMID 23653726.

External links edit

  • Chemotaxis
  • Neutrophil Chemotaxis
  • Downloadable Matlab chemotaxis simulator
  • Bacterial Chemotaxis Interactive Simulator (web-app)

chemotaxis, from, chemo, taxis, movement, organism, entity, response, chemical, stimulus, somatic, cells, bacteria, other, single, cell, multicellular, organisms, direct, their, movements, according, certain, chemicals, their, environment, this, important, bac. Chemotaxis from chemo taxis is the movement of an organism or entity in response to a chemical stimulus 1 Somatic cells bacteria and other single cell or multicellular organisms direct their movements according to certain chemicals in their environment This is important for bacteria to find food e g glucose by swimming toward the highest concentration of food molecules or to flee from poisons e g phenol In multicellular organisms chemotaxis is critical to early development e g movement of sperm towards the egg during fertilization and development e g migration of neurons or lymphocytes as well as in normal function and health e g migration of leukocytes during injury or infection 2 In addition it has been recognized that mechanisms that allow chemotaxis in animals can be subverted during cancer metastasis 3 The aberrant chemotaxis of leukocytes and lymphocytes also contribute to inflammatory diseases such as atherosclerosis asthma and arthritis 4 5 6 7 Sub cellular components such as the polarity patch generated by mating yeast may also display chemotactic behavior 8 Capillary tube assay for chemotaxis Motile prokaryotes sense chemicals in their environment and change their motility accordingly Absent chemicals movement is completely random When an attractant or repellent is present runs become longer and tumbles become less frequent The result is net movement towards or away from the chemical i e up or down the chemical gradient The net movement can be seen in the beaker where the bacteria accumulate around the origin of the attractant and away from the origin of the repellent Positive chemotaxis occurs if the movement is toward a higher concentration of the chemical in question negative chemotaxis if the movement is in the opposite direction Chemically prompted kinesis randomly directed or nondirectional can be called chemokinesis Contents 1 History of chemotaxis research 2 Bacterial chemotaxis general characteristics 2 1 Behavior 2 2 Signal transduction 2 2 1 Flagellum regulation 2 2 2 Receptor regulation 3 Chemoattractants and chemorepellents 4 Eukaryotic chemotaxis 4 1 Motility 4 1 1 Chemotaxis related migratory responses 4 2 Receptors 4 2 1 Chemotactic selection 4 3 Chemotactic ligands 4 3 1 Chemotactic range fitting 5 Clinical significance 6 Mathematical models 7 Measurement of chemotaxis 8 Artificial chemotactic systems 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksHistory of chemotaxis research editAlthough migration of cells was detected from the early days of the development of microscopy by Leeuwenhoek a Caltech lecture regarding chemotaxis propounds that erudite description of chemotaxis was only first made by T W Engelmann 1881 and W F Pfeffer 1884 in bacteria and H S Jennings 1906 in ciliates 9 The Nobel Prize laureate I Metchnikoff also contributed to the study of the field during 1882 to 1886 with investigations of the process as an initial step of phagocytosis 10 The significance of chemotaxis in biology and clinical pathology was widely accepted in the 1930s and the most fundamental definitions underlying the phenomenon were drafted by this time by whom The most important aspects in quality control of chemotaxis assays were described by H Harris in the 1950s 11 In the 1960s and 1970s the revolution of modern cell biology and biochemistry provided a series of novel techniques that became available to investigate the migratory responder cells and subcellular fractions responsible for chemotactic activity 12 The availability of this technology led to the discovery of C5a a major chemotactic factor involved in acute inflammation The pioneering works of J Adler modernized Pfeffer s capillary assay and represented a significant turning point in understanding the whole process of intracellular signal transduction of bacteria 13 14 Bacterial chemotaxis general characteristics edit nbsp Correlation of swimming behaviour and flagellar rotation Some bacteria such as E coli have several flagella per cell 4 10 typically These can rotate in two ways Counter clockwise rotation aligns the flagella into a single rotating bundle causing the bacterium to swim in a straight line and Clockwise rotation breaks the flagella bundle apart such that each flagellum points in a different direction causing the bacterium to tumble in place 15 The directions of rotation are given for an observer outside the cell looking down the flagella toward the cell 16 Behavior edit The overall movement of a bacterium is the result of alternating tumble and swim phases called run and tumble motion 17 As a result the trajectory of a bacterium swimming in a uniform environment will form a random walk with relatively straight swims interrupted by random tumbles that reorient the bacterium 18 Bacteria such as E coli are unable to choose the direction in which they swim and are unable to swim in a straight line for more than a few seconds due to rotational diffusion in other words bacteria forget the direction in which they are going By repeatedly evaluating their course and adjusting if they are moving in the wrong direction bacteria can direct their random walk motion toward favorable locations 19 In the presence of a chemical gradient bacteria will chemotax or direct their overall motion based on the gradient If the bacterium senses that it is moving in the correct direction toward attractant away from repellent it will keep swimming in a straight line for a longer time before tumbling however if it is moving in the wrong direction it will tumble sooner Bacteria like E coli use temporal sensing to decide whether their situation is improving or not and in this way find the location with the highest concentration of attractant detecting even small differences in concentration 20 This biased random walk is a result of simply choosing between two methods of random movement namely tumbling and straight swimming 21 The helical nature of the individual flagellar filament is critical for this movement to occur The protein structure that makes up the flagellar filament flagellin is conserved among all flagellated bacteria 22 Vertebrates seem to have taken advantage of this fact by possessing an immune receptor TLR5 designed to recognize this conserved protein 23 As in many instances in biology there are bacteria that do not follow this rule Many bacteria such as Vibrio are monoflagellated and have a single flagellum at one pole of the cell Their method of chemotaxis is different Others possess a single flagellum that is kept inside the cell wall These bacteria move by spinning the whole cell which is shaped like a corkscrew 24 page needed Signal transduction edit nbsp Domain structure of chemotaxis receptor for Asp Chemical gradients are sensed through multiple transmembrane receptors called methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins MCPs which vary in the molecules that they detect 25 Thousands of MCP receptors are known to be encoded across the bacterial kingdom 26 These receptors may bind attractants or repellents directly or indirectly through interaction with proteins of periplasmatic space 27 The signals from these receptors are transmitted across the plasma membrane into the cytosol where Che proteins are activated 28 The Che proteins alter the tumbling frequency and alter the receptors 28 Flagellum regulation edit The proteins CheW and CheA bind to the receptor The absence of receptor activation results in autophosphorylation in the histidine kinase CheA at a single highly conserved histidine residue 29 better source needed CheA in turn transfers phosphoryl groups to conserved aspartate residues in the response regulators CheB and CheY CheA is a histidine kinase and it does not actively transfer the phosphoryl group rather the response regulator CheB takes the phosphoryl group from CheA citation needed This mechanism of signal transduction is called a two component system and it is a common form of signal transduction in bacteria citation needed CheY induces tumbling by interacting with the flagellar switch protein FliM inducing a change from counter clockwise to clockwise rotation of the flagellum Change in the rotation state of a single flagellum can disrupt the entire flagella bundle and cause a tumble citation needed Receptor regulation edit nbsp Signalling pathways of E coli CheB when activated by CheA acts as a methylesterase removing methyl groups from glutamate residues on the cytosolic side of the receptor it works antagonistically with CheR a methyltransferase which adds methyl residues to the same glutamate residues 30 If the level of an attractant remains high the level of phosphorylation of CheA and therefore CheY and CheB will remain low the cell will swim smoothly and the level of methylation of the MCPs will increase because CheB P is not present to demethylate 30 The MCPs no longer respond to the attractant when they are fully methylated therefore even though the level of attractant might remain high the level of CheA P and CheB P increases and the cell begins to tumble 30 The MCPs can be demethylated by CheB P and when this happens the receptors can once again respond to attractants 30 The situation is the opposite with regard to repellents fully methylated MCPs respond best to repellents while least methylated MCPs respond worst to repellents citation needed This regulation allows the bacterium to remember chemical concentrations from the recent past a few seconds and compare them to those it is currently experiencing thus know whether it is traveling up or down a gradient 31 that bacteria have to chemical gradients other mechanisms are involved in increasing the absolute value of the sensitivity on a given background Well established examples are the ultra sensitive response of the motor to the CheY P signal and the clustering of chemoreceptors 32 33 Chemoattractants and chemorepellents editChemoattractants and chemorepellents are inorganic or organic substances possessing chemotaxis inducer effect in motile cells These chemotactic ligands create chemical concentration gradients that organisms prokaryotic and eukaryotic move toward or away from respectively 34 nbsp float Effects of chemoattractants are elicited via chemoreceptors such as methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins MCP 35 MCPs in E coli include Tar Tsr Trg and Tap 36 Chemoattracttants to Trg include ribose and galactose with phenol as a chemorepellent Tap and Tsr recognize dipeptides and serine as chemoattractants respectively 36 Chemoattractants or chemorepellents bind MCPs at its extracellular domain an intracellular signaling domain relays the changes in concentration of these chemotactic ligands to downstream proteins like that of CheA which then relays this signal to flagellar motors via phosphorylated CheY CheY P 35 CheY P can then control flagellar rotation influencing the direction of cell motility 35 For E coli S meliloti and R spheroides the binding of chemoattractants to MCPs inhibit CheA and therefore CheY P activity resulting in smooth runs but for B substilis CheA activity increases 35 Methylation events in E coli cause MCPs to have lower affinity to chemoattractants which causes increased activity of CheA and CheY P resulting in tumbles 35 In this way cells are able to adapt to the immediate chemoattractant concentration and detect further changes to modulate cell motility 35 Chemoattractants in eukaryotes are well characterized for immune cells Formyl peptides such as fMLF attract leukocytes such as neutrophils and macrophages causing movement toward infection sites 37 Non acylated methioninyl peptides do not act as chemoattractants to neutrophils and macrophages 37 Leukocytes also move toward chemoattractants C5a a complement component and pathogen specific ligands on bacteria 37 Mechanisms concerning chemorepellents are less known than chemoattractants Although chemorepellents work to confer an avoidance response in organisms Tetrahymena thermophila adapt to a chemorepellent Netrin 1 peptide within 10 minutes of exposure however exposure to chemorepellents such as GTP PACAP 38 and nociceptin show no such adaptations 38 GTP and ATP are chemorepellents in micro molar concentrations to both Tetrahymena and Paramecium These organisms avoid these molecules by producing avoiding reactions to re orient themselves away from the gradient 39 Eukaryotic chemotaxis edit nbsp Difference of gradient sensing in prokaryotes and eukaryotes The mechanism of chemotaxis that eukaryotic cells employ is quite different from that in the bacteria E coli however sensing of chemical gradients is still a crucial step in the process 40 better source needed Due to their small size and other biophysical constraints E coli cannot directly detect a concentration gradient 41 Instead they employ temporal gradient sensing where they move over larger distances several times their own width and measure the rate at which perceived chemical concentration changes 42 43 Eukaryotic cells are much larger than prokaryotes and have receptors embedded uniformly throughout the cell membrane 42 Eukaryotic chemotaxis involves detecting a concentration gradient spatially by comparing the asymmetric activation of these receptors at the different ends of the cell 42 Activation of these receptors results in migration towards chemoattractants or away from chemorepellants 42 In mating yeast which are non motile patches of polarity proteins on the cell cortex can relocate in a chemotactic fashion up pheromone gradients 44 8 It has also been shown that both prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells are capable of chemotactic memory 43 45 In prokaryotes this mechanism involves the methylation of receptors called methyl accepting chemotaxis proteins MCPs 43 This results in their desensitization and allows prokaryotes to remember and adapt to a chemical gradient 43 In contrast chemotactic memory in eukaryotes can be explained by the Local Excitation Global Inhibition LEGI model 45 46 LEGI involves the balance between a fast excitation and delayed inhibition which controls downstream signaling such as Ras activation and PIP3 production 47 Levels of receptors intracellular signalling pathways and the effector mechanisms all represent diverse eukaryotic type components In eukaryotic unicellular cells amoeboid movement and cilium or the eukaryotic flagellum are the main effectors e g Amoeba or Tetrahymena 48 49 Some eukaryotic cells of higher vertebrate origin such as immune cells also move to where they need to be Besides immune competent cells granulocyte monocyte lymphocyte a large group of cells considered previously to be fixed into tissues are also motile in special physiological e g mast cell fibroblast endothelial cells or pathological conditions e g metastases 50 Chemotaxis has high significance in the early phases of embryogenesis as development of germ layers is guided by gradients of signal molecules 51 52 Motility edit Unlike motility in bacterial chemotaxis the mechanism by which eukaryotic cells physically move is unclear There appear to be mechanisms by which an external chemotactic gradient is sensed and turned into an intracellular PIP3 gradient which results in a gradient and the activation of a signaling pathway culminating in the polymerisation of actin filaments The growing distal end of actin filaments develops connections with the internal surface of the plasma membrane via different sets of peptides and results in the formation of anterior pseudopods and posterior uropods Cilia of eukaryotic cells can also produce chemotaxis in this case it is mainly a Ca2 dependent induction of the microtubular system of the basal body and the beat of the 9 2 microtubules within cilia The orchestrated beating of hundreds of cilia is synchronized by a submembranous system built between basal bodies The details of the signaling pathways are still not totally clear Chemotaxis related migratory responses edit nbsp Chemotaxis related migratory responses Chemotaxis refers to the directional migration of cells in response to chemical gradients several variations of chemical induced migration exist as listed below Chemokinesis refers to an increase in cellular motility in response to chemicals in the surrounding environment Unlike chemotaxis the migration stimulated by chemokinesis lacks directionality and instead increases environmental scanning behaviors 53 In haptotaxis the gradient of the chemoattractant is expressed or bound on a surface in contrast to the classical model of chemotaxis in which the gradient develops in a soluble fluid 54 The most common biologically active haptotactic surface is the extracellular matrix ECM the presence of bound ligands is responsible for induction of transendothelial migration and angiogenesis Necrotaxis embodies a special type of chemotaxis when the chemoattractant molecules are released from necrotic or apoptotic cells Depending on the chemical character of released substances necrotaxis can accumulate or repel cells which underlines the pathophysiological significance of this phenomenon Receptors edit In general eukaryotic cells sense the presence of chemotactic stimuli through the use of 7 transmembrane or serpentine heterotrimeric G protein coupled receptors a class representing a significant portion of the genome 55 Some members of this gene superfamily are used in eyesight rhodopsins as well as in olfaction smelling 56 57 The main classes of chemotaxis receptors are triggered by Formyl peptides formyl peptide receptors FPR Chemokines chemokine receptors CCR or CXCR and Leukotrienes leukotriene receptors BLT 58 However induction of a wide set of membrane receptors e g cyclic nucleotides amino acids insulin vasoactive peptides also elicit migration of the cell 59 Chemotactic selection edit nbsp Chemotactic selection While some chemotaxis receptors are expressed in the surface membrane with long term characteristics as they are determined genetically others have short term dynamics as they are assembled ad hoc in the presence of the ligand 60 The diverse features of the chemotaxis receptors and ligands allows for the possibility of selecting chemotactic responder cells with a simple chemotaxis assay By chemotactic selection we can determine whether a still uncharacterized molecule acts via the long or the short term receptor pathway 61 The term chemotactic selection is also used to designate a technique that separates eukaryotic or prokaryotic cells according to their chemotactic responsiveness to selector ligands 62 non primary source needed non primary source needed Chemotactic ligands edit nbsp Structure of chemokine classes nbsp Three dimensional structure of chemokines The number of molecules capable of eliciting chemotactic responses is relatively high and we can distinguish primary and secondary chemotactic molecules citation needed The main groups of the primary ligands are as follows Formyl peptides are di tri tetrapeptides of bacterial origin formylated on the N terminus of the peptide citation needed 63 They are released from bacteria in vivo or after decomposition of the cell a typical member of this group is the N formylmethionyl leucyl phenylalanine abbreviated fMLF or fMLP citation needed Bacterial fMLF is a key component of inflammation has characteristic chemoattractant effects in neutrophil granulocytes and monocytes citation needed The chemotactic factor ligands and receptors related to formyl peptides are summarized in the related article Formyl peptide receptors Complement 3a C3a and complement 5a C5a are intermediate products of the complement cascade citation needed Their synthesis is joined to the three alternative pathways classical lectin dependent and alternative of complement activation by a convertase enzyme citation needed The main target cells of these derivatives are neutrophil granulocytes and monocytes as well citation needed Chemokines belong to a special class of cytokines not only do their groups C CC CXC CX3C chemokines represent structurally related molecules with a special arrangement of disulfide bridges but also their target cell specificity is diverse citation needed CC chemokines act on monocytes e g RANTES and CXC chemokines are neutrophil granulocyte specific e g IL 8 citation needed Investigations of the three dimensional structures of chemokines provided evidence that a characteristic composition of beta sheets and an alpha helix provides expression of sequences required for interaction with the chemokine receptors citation needed Formation of dimers and their increased biological activity was demonstrated by crystallography of several chemokines e g IL 8 citation needed Metabolites of polyunsaturated fatty acids Leukotrienes are eicosanoid lipid mediators made by the metabolism of arachidonic acid by ALOX5 also termed 5 lipoxygenase Their most prominent member with chemotactic factor activity is leukotriene B4 which elicits adhesion chemotaxis and aggregation of leukocytes The chemoattractant action of LTB4 is induced via either of two G protein coupled receptors BLT1 and BLT2 which are highly expressed in cells involved in inflammation and allergy 64 The family of 5 Hydroxyicosatetraenoic acid eicosanoids are arachidonic acid metabolites also formed by ALOX5 Three members of the family form naturally and have prominent chemotactic activity These listed in order of decreasing potency are 5 oxo eicosatetraenoic acid 5 oxo 15 hydroxy eicosatetraenoic acid and 5 Hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid This family of agonists stimulates chemotactic responses in human eosinophils neutrophils and monocytes by binding to the Oxoeicosanoid receptor 1 which like the receptors for leukotriene B4 is a G protein coupled receptor 64 Aside from the skin neutrophils are the body s first line of defense against bacterial infections After leaving nearby blood vessels these cells recognize chemicals produced by bacteria in a cut or scratch and migrate toward the smell 5 hydroxyeicosatrienoic acid and 5 oxoeicosatrienoic acid are metabolites of Mead acid 5Z 8Z 11Z eicosatrirenoid acid they stimulate leukocyte chemotaxis through the oxoeicosanoid receptor 1 65 with 5 oxoeicosatrienoic acid being as potent as its arachidonic acid derived analog 5 oxo eicosatetraenoic acid in stimulating human blood eosinophil and neutrophil chemotaxis 64 12 Hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid is an eicosanoid metabolite of arachidonic acid made by ALOX12 which stimulates leukocyte chemotaxis through the leukotriene B4 receptor BLT2 64 Prostaglandin D2 is an eicosanoid metabolite of arachidononic acid made by cyclooxygenase 1 or cyclooxygenase 2 that stimulates chemotaxis through the Prostaglandin DP2 receptor It elicits chemotactic responses in eosinophils basophils and T helper cells of the Th2 subtype 66 non primary source needed non primary source needed 12 Hydroxyheptadecatrienoic acid is a non eicosanoid metabolite of arachidonic acid made by cyclooxygenase 1 or cyclooxygenase 2 that stimulates leukocyte chemotaxis though the leukotriene B4 receptor BLT2 67 non primary source needed non primary source needed 15 oxo eicosatetraenoic acid is an eicosanoid metabolite of arachidonic acid made my ALOX15 it has weak chemotactic activity for human monocytes sees 15 Hydroxyeicosatetraenoic acid 15 oxo ETE 68 non primary source needed non primary source needed The receptor or other mechanism by which this metabolite stimulates chemotaxis has not been elucidated Chemotactic range fitting edit nbsp Chemotactic range fitting Chemotactic responses elicited by ligand receptor interactions vary with the concentration of the ligand Investigations of ligand families e g amino acids or oligopeptides demonstrates that chemoattractant activity occurs over a wide range while chemorepellent activities have narrow ranges 69 Clinical significance editA changed migratory potential of cells has relatively high importance in the development of several clinical symptoms and syndromes Altered chemotactic activity of extracellular e g Escherichia coli or intracellular e g Listeria monocytogenes pathogens itself represents a significant clinical target Modification of endogenous chemotactic ability of these microorganisms by pharmaceutical agents can decrease or inhibit the ratio of infections or spreading of infectious diseases Apart from infections there are some other diseases wherein impaired chemotaxis is the primary etiological factor as in Chediak Higashi syndrome where giant intracellular vesicles inhibit normal migration of cells Chemotaxis in diseases citation needed Type of disease Chemotaxis increased Chemotaxis decreased Infections Inflammations AIDS Brucellosis Chemotaxis results in the disease Chediak Higashi syndrome Kartagener syndrome Chemotaxis is affected Atherosclerosis arthritis periodontitis psoriasis reperfusion injury metastatic tumors Multiple sclerosis Hodgkin disease male infertility Intoxications Asbestos benzpyrene Hg and Cr salts ozoneMathematical models editSeveral mathematical models of chemotaxis were developed depending on the type of Migration e g basic differences of bacterial swimming movement of unicellular eukaryotes with cilia flagellum and amoeboid migration Physico chemical characteristics of the chemicals e g diffusion working as ligands Biological characteristics of the ligands attractant neutral and repellent molecules Assay systems applied to evaluate chemotaxis see incubation times development and stability of concentration gradients Other environmental effects possessing direct or indirect influence on the migration lighting temperature magnetic fields etc Although interactions of the factors listed above make the behavior of the solutions of mathematical models of chemotaxis rather complex it is possible to describe the basic phenomenon of chemotaxis driven motion in a straightforward way Indeed let us denote with f displaystyle varphi nbsp the spatially non uniform concentration of the chemo attractant and f displaystyle nabla varphi nbsp as its gradient Then the chemotactic cellular flow also called current J displaystyle bf J nbsp that is generated by the chemotaxis is linked to the above gradient by the law 70 J C x f f displaystyle bf J C chi varphi nabla varphi nbsp where C displaystyle C nbsp is the spatial density of the cells and x displaystyle chi nbsp is the so called Chemotactic coefficient x displaystyle chi nbsp is often not constant but a decreasing function of the chemo attractant For some quantity r displaystyle rho nbsp that is subject to total flux J displaystyle bf J nbsp and generation destruction term S displaystyle S nbsp it is possible to formulate a continuity equation r t J S displaystyle partial rho over partial t nabla cdot bf J S nbsp where displaystyle nabla cdot nbsp is the divergence This general equation applies to both the cell density and the chemo attractant Therefore incorporating a diffusion flux into the total flux term the interactions between these quantities are governed by a set of coupled reaction diffusion partial differential equations describing the change in C displaystyle C nbsp and f displaystyle varphi nbsp 70 C t f C D C C C x f f f t g f C D f f displaystyle begin aligned partial C over partial t amp f C nabla cdot left D C nabla C C chi varphi nabla varphi right partial varphi over partial t amp g varphi C nabla cdot D varphi nabla varphi end aligned nbsp where f C displaystyle f C nbsp describes the growth in cell density g f C displaystyle g varphi C nbsp is the kinetics source term for the chemo attractant and the diffusion coefficients for cell density and the chemo attractant are respectively D C displaystyle D C nbsp and D f displaystyle D varphi nbsp Spatial ecology of soil microorganisms is a function of their chemotactic sensitivities towards substrate and fellow organisms 71 non primary source needed non primary source needed The chemotactic behavior of the bacteria was proven to lead to non trivial population patterns even in the absence of environmental heterogeneities The presence of structural pore scale heterogeneities has an extra impact on the emerging bacterial patterns Measurement of chemotaxis editMain article Chemotaxis assay A wide range of techniques is available to evaluate chemotactic activity of cells or the chemoattractant and chemorepellent character of ligands The basic requirements of the measurement are as follows Concentration gradients can develop relatively quickly and persist for a long time in the system Chemotactic and chemokinetic activities are distinguished Migration of cells is free toward and away on the axis of the concentration gradient Detected responses are the results of active migration of cells Despite the fact that an ideal chemotaxis assay is still not available there are several protocols and pieces of equipment that offer good correspondence with the conditions described above The most commonly used are summarised in the table below Type of assay Agar plate assays Two chamber assays Others Examples PP chamber Boyden chamber Zigmond chamber Dunn chambers Multi well chambers Capillary techniques T maze technique Opalescence technique Orientation assaysArtificial chemotactic systems editChemical robots that use artificial chemotaxis to navigate autonomously have been designed 72 73 Applications include targeted delivery of drugs in the body 74 More recently enzyme molecules have also shown positive chemotactic behavior in the gradient of their substrates 75 The thermodynamically favorable binding of enzymes to their specific substrates is recognized as the origin of enzymatic chemotaxis 76 Additionally enzymes in cascades have also shown substrate driven chemotactic aggregation 77 Apart from active enzymes non reacting molecules also show chemotactic behavior This has been demonstrated by using dye molecules that move directionally in gradients of polymer solution 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Robotics Chemotactic Drug Carriers Central European Journal of Medicine 8 4 377 382 doi 10 2478 s11536 012 0130 9 S2CID 84150518 Sengupta S Dey KK Muddana HS Tabouillot T Ibele ME Butler PJ Sen A January 2013 Enzyme molecules as nanomotors Journal of the American Chemical Society 135 4 1406 14 doi 10 1021 ja3091615 PMID 23308365 Mohajerani F Zhao X Somasundar A Velegol D Sen A 2018 A Theory of Enzyme Chemotaxis From Experiments to Modeling Biochemistry 57 43 6256 6263 arXiv 1809 02530 doi 10 1021 acs biochem 8b00801 PMID 30251529 S2CID 52816076 Zhao X Palacci H Yadav V Spiering MM Gilson MK Butler PJ Hess H Benkovic SJ Sen A March 2018 Substrate driven chemotactic assembly in an enzyme cascade Nature Chemistry 10 3 311 317 Bibcode 2018NatCh 10 311Z doi 10 1038 nchem 2905 PMID 29461522 Guha R Mohajerani F Collins M Ghosh S Sen A Velegol D November 2017 Chemotaxis of Molecular Dyes in Polymer Gradients in Solution Journal of the American Chemical Society 139 44 15588 15591 doi 10 1021 jacs 7b08783 PMID 29064685 Further reading edit nbsp Scholia has a topic profile for Chemotaxis Alberts B Johnson A Lewis J Walter P Raff MC 2002 Bacterial Chemotaxis Depends on a Two Component Signaling Pathway Activated by Histidine Kinase associated Receptors Molecular Biology of the Cell Taylor amp Francis Group ISBN 978 0 8153 4069 0 Retrieved 18 September 2017 Bagorda A Parent CA August 2008 Eukaryotic chemotaxis at a glance Journal of Cell Science 121 Pt 16 2621 4 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 515 32 doi 10 1242 jcs 018077 PMC 7213762 PMID 18685153 Berg HC 1993 Random walks in biology Expanded rev ed Princeton NJ Princeton Univ Press ISBN 978 0 691 00064 0 Berg HC 2003 E coli in motion Vol 58 New York Springer pp 64 65 Bibcode 2005PhT 58b 64B doi 10 1063 1 1897527 ISBN 978 0 387 00888 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Dusenbery DB 2009 Living at micro scale the unexpected physics of being small Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03116 6 Eisenbach M 2004 Lengeler JW ed Chemotaxis London Imperial College Press ISBN 978 1 86094 413 0 Eisenbach Michael December 2011 Bacterial Chemotaxis Encyclopedia of Life Sciences doi 10 1002 9780470015902 a0001251 pub3 ISBN 978 0470016176 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Hazelbauer GL 13 October 2012 Bacterial chemotaxis the early years of molecular studies Annual Review of Microbiology 66 1 285 303 doi 10 1146 annurev micro 092611 150120 PMC 3989901 PMID 22994495 Jin T Hereld D 2016 Chemotaxis Methods and Protocols Humana Press ISBN 978 1 4939 3480 5 Miller LD Russell MH Alexandre G 2009 Diversity in bacterial chemotactic responses and niche adaptation Vol 66 pp 53 75 doi 10 1016 S0065 2164 08 00803 4 ISBN 9780123747884 PMID 19203648 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Rao CV Kirby JR Arkin AP February 2004 Design and diversity in bacterial chemotaxis a comparative study in Escherichia coli and Bacillus subtilis PLOS Biology 2 2 E49 doi 10 1371 journal pbio 0020049 PMC 340952 PMID 14966542 Williams AH 20 December 2010 Chemotaxis on the move active learning teaching tool Journal of Microbiology amp Biology Education 11 2 177 8 doi 10 1128 jmbe v11i2 216 PMC 3577161 PMID 23653726 External links edit nbsp Wikibooks has more on the topic of Chemotaxis nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chemotaxis Chemotaxis Neutrophil Chemotaxis Cell Migration Gateway Downloadable Matlab chemotaxis simulator Bacterial Chemotaxis Interactive Simulator web app Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chemotaxis amp oldid 1217601709, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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