The Escherichia coli chemotaxis signaling pathway has served as a model
system for studying the adaptive sensing of environmental signals by large
protein complexes. The chemoreceptors control the kinase activity of CheA in
response to the extracellular ligand concentration and adapt across a wide
concentration range by undergoing methylation and demethylation. Methylation
shifts the kinase response curve by orders of magnitude in ligand concentration
while incurring a much smaller change in the ligand binding curve. Here, we
show that this asymmetric shift in binding and kinase response is inconsistent
with equilibrium allosteric models regardless of parameter choices. To resolve
this inconsistency, we present a nonequilibrium allosteric model that
explicitly includes the dissipative reaction cycles driven by ATP hydrolysis.
The model successfully explains all existing measurements for both aspartate
and serine receptors. Our results suggest that while ligand binding controls
the equilibrium balance between the ON and OFF states of the kinase, receptor
methylation modulates the kinetic properties (e.g., the phosphorylation rate)
of the ON state. Furthermore, sufficient energy dissipation is necessary for
maintaining and enhancing the sensitivity range and amplitude of the kinase
response. We demonstrate that the nonequilibrium allosteric model is broadly
applicable to other sensor-kinase systems by successfully fitting previously
unexplained data from the DosP bacterial oxygen-sensing system. Overall, this
work provides a new perspective on cooperative sensing by large protein
complexes and opens up new research directions for understanding their
microscopic mechanisms through simultaneous measurements and modeling of ligand
binding and downstream responses.Comment: 12 (main text) + 4 (supplemental information) pages, 6+4 figure