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Dive into the research topics where Karen A. Fahrner is active.

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Featured researches published by Karen A. Fahrner.


Molecular Microbiology | 2005

The Escherichia coli baby cell column: a novel cell synchronization method provides new insight into the bacterial cell cycle

David W. Bates; Jessica Epstein; Erik Boye; Karen A. Fahrner; Howard C. Berg; Nancy Kleckner

We describe a new method for synchronizing bacterial cells. Cells that have transiently expressed an inducible mutant ‘sticky’ flagellin are adhered to a volume of glass beads suspended in a chromatography column though which growth medium is pumped. Following repression of flagellin synthesis, newborn cells are eluted from the column in large quantities exceeding that of current baby machine techniques by approximately 10‐fold. Eluted cultures of ‘baby cells’ are highly synchronous as determined by analysis of DNA replication, cell division and other events, over time after elution from the column. We also show that use of ‘minutes after elution’ as a time metric permits much greater temporal resolution among sequential chromosomal events than the commonly used metric of cell size (length). The former approach reveals the existence of transient intermediate stages that are missed by the latter approach. This finding has two important implications. First, at a practical level, the baby cell column is a particularly powerful method for temporal analysis. Second, at a conceptual level, replication‐related events are more tightly linked to cell birth (i.e. cell division) than to absolute cell mass.


Nature | 2003

Biomechanics: Bacterial flagellar switching under load

Karen A. Fahrner; William S. Ryu; Howard C. Berg

Flagellated bacteria swim up gradients of chemical attractants by modulating the direction of rotation of their flagellar motors, but how this switching mechanism works is not understood. Here we show that the probability of the motor rotating in the clockwise direction increases under high load, when the motor spins slowly (at less than 50 Hz). We suggest that either the switch is responding to small changes in torque — the torque increases only fractionally between 50 Hz and stall — or it senses motor speed, perhaps by means of proton flux.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 2009

Switching of the bacterial flagellar motor near zero load.

Junhua Yuan; Karen A. Fahrner; Howard C. Berg

Flagellated bacteria, such as Escherichia coli, are able to swim up gradients of chemical attractants by modulating the direction of rotation of their flagellar motors, which spin alternately clockwise (CW) and counterclockwise (CCW). Chemotactic behavior has been studied under a variety of conditions, mostly at high loads (at large motor torques). Here, we examine motor switching at low loads. Nano-gold spheres of various sizes were attached to hooks (the flexible coupling at the base of the flagellar filament) of cells lacking flagellar filaments in media containing different concentrations of the viscous agent Ficoll. The speeds and directions of rotation of the spheres were measured. Contrary to the case at high loads, motor switching rates increased appreciably with load. Both the CW-->CCW and CCW-->CW switching rates increased linearly with motor torque. Evidently, the switch senses stator-rotor interactions as well as the CheY-P concentration.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2010

Asymmetry in the clockwise and counterclockwise rotation of the bacterial flagellar motor

Junhua Yuan; Karen A. Fahrner; Linda Turner; Howard C. Berg

Cells of Escherichia coli are able to swim up gradients of chemical attractants by modulating the direction of rotation of their flagellar motors, which spin alternately clockwise (CW) and counterclockwise (CCW). Rotation in either direction has been thought to be symmetric and exhibit the same torques and speeds. The relationship between torque and speed is one of the most important measurable characteristics of the motor, used to distinguish specific mechanisms of motor rotation. Previous measurements of the torque–speed relationship have been made with cells lacking the response regulator CheY that spin their motors exclusively CCW. In this case, the torque declines slightly up to an intermediate speed called the “knee speed” after which it falls rapidly to zero. This result is consistent with a “power-stroke” mechanism for torque generation. Here, we measure the torque–speed relationship for cells that express large amounts of CheY and only spin their motors CW. We find that the torque decreases linearly with speed, a result remarkably different from that for CCW rotation. We obtain similar results for wild-type cells by reexamining data collected in previous work. We speculate that CCW rotation might be optimized for runs, with higher speeds increasing the ability of cells to sense spatial gradients, whereas CW rotation might be optimized for tumbles, where the object is to change cell trajectories. But why a linear torque–speed relationship might be optimum for the latter purpose we do not know.


Journal of Bacteriology | 2015

Mutations That Stimulate flhDC Expression in Escherichia coli K-12

Karen A. Fahrner; Howard C. Berg

UNLABELLED Motility is a beneficial attribute that enables cells to access and explore new environments and to escape detrimental ones. The organelle of motility in Escherichia coli is the flagellum, and its production is initiated by the activating transcription factors FlhD and FlhC. The expression of these factors by the flhDC operon is highly regulated and influenced by environmental conditions. The flhDC promoter is recognized by σ(70) and is dependent on the transcriptional activator cyclic AMP (cAMP)-cAMP receptor protein complex (cAMP-CRP). A number of K-12 strains exhibit limited motility due to low expression levels of flhDC. We report here a large number of mutations that stimulate flhDC expression in such strains. They include single nucleotide changes in the -10 element of the promoter, in the promoter spacer, and in the cAMP-CRP binding region. In addition, we show that insertion sequence (IS) elements or a kanamycin gene located hundreds of base pairs upstream of the promoter can effectively enhance transcription, suggesting that the topology of a large upstream region plays a significant role in the regulation of flhDC expression. None of the mutations eliminated the requirement for cAMP-CRP for activation. However, several mutations allowed expression in the absence of the nucleoid organizing protein, H-NS, which is normally required for flhDC expression. IMPORTANCE The flhDC operon of Escherichia coli encodes transcription factors that initiate flagellar synthesis, an energetically costly process that is highly regulated. Few deregulating mutations have been reported thus far. This paper describes new single nucleotide mutations that stimulate flhDC expression, including a number that map to the promoter spacer region. In addition, this work shows that insertion sequence elements or a kanamycin gene located far upstream from the promoter or repressor binding sites also stimulate transcription, indicating a role of regional topology in the regulation of flhDC expression.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 1998

Control of direction of flagellar rotation in bacterial chemotaxis

Birgit E. Scharf; Karen A. Fahrner; Linda Turner; Howard C. Berg


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1994

A Mutant Hook-associated Protein (HAP3) Facilitates Torsionally Induced Transformations of the Flagellar Filament of Escherichia coli

Karen A. Fahrner; Steven M. Block; Sanjay Krishnaswamy; John S. Parkinson; Howard C. Berg


Journal of Bacteriology | 1991

Visualization of bacterial flagella by video-enhanced light microscopy.

Steven M. Block; Karen A. Fahrner; Howard C. Berg


Journal of Bacteriology | 1998

CheZ Has No Effect on Flagellar Motors Activated by CheY13DK106YW

Birgit E. Scharf; Karen A. Fahrner; Howard C. Berg


Molecular Microbiology | 2005

The Escherichia coli baby cell column: a novel cell synchronization method provides new insight into the bacterial cell cycle: The baby cell column

David Bates; Jessica Epstein; Erik Boye; Karen A. Fahrner; Howard C. Berg; Nancy Kleckner

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Junhua Yuan

California Institute of Technology

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Erik Boye

Oslo University Hospital

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David Bates

Baylor College of Medicine

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David W. Bates

Brigham and Women's Hospital

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