Evolution of Two-Component Signal Transduction Systems
Massachusetts Institute of Technology · Howard Hughes Medical Institute
Abstract
To exist in a wide range of environmental niches, bacteria must sense and respond to a variety of external signals. A primary means by which this occurs is through two-component signal transduction pathways, typically composed of a sensor histidine kinase that receives the input stimuli and then phosphorylates a response regulator that effects an appropriate change in cellular physiology. Histidine kinases and response regulators have an intrinsic modularity that separates signal input, phosphotransfer, and output response; this modularity has allowed bacteria to dramatically expand and diversify their signaling capabilities. Recent work has begun to reveal the molecular basis by which two-component proteins…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 23.71
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 100
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Response regulator
- Histidine kinase
- Biology
- Signal transduction
- Modularity (biology)
- Two-component regulatory system
- Computational biology
- Gene duplication
- Life in Land