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  lüll Osmosensing by bacteria: signals and membrane-based sensors Wood JMMicrobiol Mol Biol Rev  1999[Mar]; 63 (1): 230-62Bacteria can survive dramatic osmotic shifts. Osmoregulatory responses mitigate  the passive adjustments in cell structure and the growth inhibition that may  ensue. The levels of certain cytoplasmic solutes rise and fall in response to  increases and decreases, respectively, in extracellular osmolality. Certain  organic compounds are favored over ions as osmoregulatory solutes, although K+  fluxes are intrinsic to the osmoregulatory response for at least some organisms.  Osmosensors must undergo transitions between "off" and "on" conformations in  response to changes in extracellular water activity (direct osmosensing) or  resulting changes in cell structure (indirect osmosensing). Those located in the  cytoplasmic membranes and nucleoids of bacteria are positioned for indirect  osmosensing. Cytoplasmic membrane-based osmosensors may detect changes in the  periplasmic and/or cytoplasmic solvent by experiencing changes in preferential  interactions with particular solvent constituents, cosolvent-induced hydration  changes, and/or macromolecular crowding. Alternatively, the membrane may act as  an antenna and osmosensors may detect changes in membrane structure. Cosolvents  may modulate intrinsic biomembrane strain and/or topologically closed membrane  systems may experience changes in mechanical strain in response to imposed  osmotic shifts. The osmosensory mechanisms controlling membrane-based K+  transporters, transcriptional regulators, osmoprotectant transporters, and  mechanosensitive channels intrinsic to the cytoplasmic membrane of Escherichia  coli are under intensive investigation. The osmoprotectant transporter ProP and  channel MscL act as osmosensors after purification and reconstitution in  proteoliposomes. Evidence that sensor kinase KdpD receives multiple sensory  inputs is consistent with the effects of K+ fluxes on nucleoid structure,  cellular energetics, cytoplasmic ionic strength, and ion composition as well as  on cytoplasmic osmolality. Thus, osmoregulatory responses accommodate and exploit  the effects of individual cosolvents on cell structure and function as well as  the collective contribution of cosolvents to intracellular osmolality.|*Bacterial Physiological Phenomena[MESH]|*Escherichia coli Proteins[MESH]|*Symporters[MESH]|ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters/metabolism[MESH]|Bacterial Proteins/metabolism[MESH]|Betaine/metabolism[MESH]|Carrier Proteins/metabolism[MESH]|Cell Membrane/*chemistry/*metabolism[MESH]|Ion Channels/metabolism[MESH]|Liposomes/metabolism[MESH]|Osmolar Concentration[MESH]|Osmosis/physiology[MESH]|Osmotic Pressure[MESH]|Protein Kinases/metabolism[MESH]|Water-Electrolyte Balance/physiology[MESH] |