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1.
Spore coat proteins obtained by extraction with sodium dodecylsulfate/dithiothreitol from six Bacillus spores were compared by immunoblot analysis using antibodies to spore coat proteins from two strains of B. megaterium. Although the extract from spores of each strain had heterogenous proteins with various molecular weights, there were some bands which cross-reacted with specific antibodies from B. megaterium spores. Specific antibody to 48K protein from B. megaterium ATCC 12872 cross-reacted with 17K protein from B. megaterium ATCC 19213, 13K protein from B. cereus and 50K protein from B. subtilis 60015 and B. subtilis NRRL B558. Also, specific antibody to 22K protein from the same strain cross-reacted with 22K and 17K proteins from B. megaterium ATCC 19213 and 13K protein from B. cereus T. Specific antibody to 17K protein from B. megaterium ATCC 19213 reacted with 22K and 19K proteins in addition to 17K protein of own strain, and it was cross-reactive with 16K protein from B. megaterium ATCC 12872, 19K and 27K proteins from B. thiaminolyticus, 13K protein from B. cereus.  相似文献   

2.
Degradation of small, acid-soluble spore proteins during germination of Bacillus subtilis spores is initiated by a sequence-specific protease called GPR. Western blot (immunoblot) analysis of either Bacillus megaterium or B. subtilis GPR expressed in B. subtilis showed that GPR is synthesized at about the third hour of sporulation in a precursor form and is processed to an approximately 2- to 5-kDa-smaller species 2 to 3 h later, at or slightly before the time of accumulation of dipicolinic acid by the forespore. This was found with both normal levels of expression of B. subtilis and B. megaterium GPR in B. subtilis, as well as when either protein was overexpressed up to 100-fold. The sporulation-specific processing of GPR was blocked in all spoIII, -IV, and -V mutants tested (none of which accumulated dipicolinic acid), but not in a spoVI mutant which accumulated dipicolinic acid. The amino-terminal sequences of the B. megaterium and B. subtilis GPR initially synthesized in sporulation were identical to those predicted from the coding genes' sequences. However, the processed form generated in sporulation lacked 15 (B. megaterium) or 16 (B. subtilis) amino-terminal residues. The amino acid sequence surrounding this proteolytic cleavage site was very homologous to the consensus sequence recognized and cleaved by GPR in its small, acid-soluble spore protein substrates. This observation, plus the efficient processing of overproduced GPR during sporulation, suggests that the GPR precursor may autoproteolyze itself during sporulation. During spore germination, the GPR from either species expressed in B. subtilis was further processed by removal of one additional amino-terminal amino acid (leucine), generating the mature protease which acts during spore germination.  相似文献   

3.
As found previously with other Bacillus species, spores of B. stearothermophilus and "Thermoactinomyces thalpophilus" contained significant levels of small, acid-soluble spore proteins (SASP) which were rapidly degraded during spore germination and which reacted with antibodies raised against B. megaterium SASP. Genes coding for a B. stearothermophilus and a "T. thalpophilus" SASP as well as for two B. cereus SASP were cloned, their nucleotide sequences were determined, and the amino acid sequences of the SASP coded for were compared. Strikingly, all of the amino acid residues previously found to be conserved in this group of SASP both within and between two other Bacillus species (B. megaterium and B. subtilis) were also conserved in the SASP coded for by the B. cereus genes as well as those coded for by the genes from the more distantly related organisms B. stearothermophilus and "T. thalpophilus." This finding strongly suggests that there is significant selective pressure to conserve SASP primary sequence and thus that these proteins serve some function other than simply amino acid storage.  相似文献   

4.
The Bacillus subtilis gene (sspE) which codes for small acid-soluble spore protein gamma (SASP-gamma) was cloned, and its chromosomal location (65 degrees, linked to glpD) and nucleotide sequence were determined. The amino acid sequence of SASP-gamma is similar to that of SASP-B of Bacillus megaterium, but these sequences are not as highly conserved across species as are those of other SASPs. The SASP-gamma gene is transcribed only in sporulation in parallel with other SASP genes and gives a single mRNA that is approximately 340 nucleotides long. The results of hybridization of an sspE gene probe to Southern blots of B. subtilis DNA suggested that there is only a single gene coding for the SASP-gamma type of protein in B. subtilis. This was confirmed by introducing a deletion mutation into the cloned sspE gene and transferring the deletion into the B. subtilis chromosome, with concomitant loss of the wild-type gene. This sspE deletion strain sporulated well, but lacked the SASP-gamma type of protein.  相似文献   

5.
6.
A proteolytic activity present in spores of Bacillus megaterium has previously been implicated in the initiation of hydrolysis of the A, B, and C proteins which are degraded during spore germination. Four mutants of B. megaterium containing 20 to 30% of the normal level of spore proteolytic activity have been isolated. Partial purification of the protease from wild-type spores by a reviewed procedure resulted in the resolution of spore protease activity on the A, B, and C proteins into two peaks--a major one (protease II) and a minor one (protease I). The protease mutants tested lacked active protease II. All of the mutants exhibited a decreased rate of degradation of the A, B, and C proteins during spore germination at 30 degrees C, but degradation of the proteins did occur. Degradation of the A, B, and C proteins during germination of the mutant spores was decreased neither by blockade of ATP production nor by germination at 44 degrees C. Initiation of spore germination was normal in all four mutants, and all four mutants went through outgrowth, grew, and sporulated normally in rich medium. Similarly, outgrowth of spores of two of the four mutants was normal in minimal medium at 30 degrees C. In the two mutants studied, the kinetics of loss of spore heat resistance and spore UV light resistance during germination were identical to those of wild-type spores. This indicates that the A, B, and C proteins alone are not sufficient to account for the heat or UV light resistance of the dormant spore.  相似文献   

7.
Bacteria of various Bacillus species are able to grow in media with very high osmotic strength in part due to the accumulation of low-molecular-weight osmolytes such as glycine betaine (GB). Cells of Bacillus species grown in rich and minimal media contained low levels of GB, but GB levels were 4- to 60-fold higher in cells grown in media with high salt. GB levels in Bacillus subtilis cells grown in minimal medium were increased approximately 7-fold by GB in the medium and 60-fold by GB plus high salt. GB was present in spores of Bacillus species prepared in media with or without high salt but at lower levels than in comparable growing cells. With spores prepared in media with high salt, GB levels were highest in B. subtilis spores and > or =20-fold lower in B. cereus and B. megaterium spores. Although GB levels in B. subtilis spores were elevated 15- to 30-fold by GB plus high salt in sporulation media, GB levels did not affect spore resistance. GB levels were similar in wild-type B. subtilis spores and spores that lacked major small, acid-soluble spore proteins but were much lower in spores that lacked dipicolinic acid.  相似文献   

8.
Genome features of the Bacillus cereus group genomes (representative strains of Bacillus cereus, Bacillus anthracis and Bacillus thuringiensis sub spp. israelensis) were analyzed and compared with the Bacillus subtilis genome. A core set of 1381 protein families among the four Bacillus genomes, with an additional set of 933 families common to the B. cereus group, was identified. Differences in signal transduction pathways, membrane transporters, cell surface structures, cell wall, and S-layer proteins suggesting differences in their phenotype were identified. The B. cereus group has signal transduction systems including a tyrosine kinase related to two-component system histidine kinases from B. subtilis. A model for regulation of the stress responsive sigma factor sigmaB in the B. cereus group different from the well studied regulation in B. subtilis has been proposed. Despite a high degree of chromosomal synteny among these genomes, significant differences in cell wall and spore coat proteins that contribute to the survival and adaptation in specific hosts has been identified.  相似文献   

9.
The small acid-soluble spore proteins alpha and beta were not detected during stationary-phase growth of asporogenous Bacillus subtilis mutants blocked in stages 0, II, or III, but mutants blocked in stages IV or V accumulated nearly wild-type levels of these small acid-soluble spore proteins. Similar results were obtained when production of Bacillus megaterium C protein (also a small acid-soluble spore protein), as well as alpha and beta, were monitored in these mutants containing a recombinant plasmid carrying the B. megaterium C protein gene. The only exception was a spo0H mutant which synthesized a small amount of C protein, but no alpha or beta.  相似文献   

10.
Acid-soluble spore proteins of Bacillus subtilis   总被引:15,自引:12,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Acid-soluble spore proteins (ASSPs) comprise about 5% of the total protein of mature spores of different Bacillus subtilis strains. They consist of three abundant species, alpha, beta, and gamma, four less abundant species, and several minor species, alpha, beta, and gamma make up about 18, 18 and 36%, respectively, of the total ASSPs of strain 168, have molecular weights of 5,900, 5,9000, and 11,000, respectively, and resemble the major (A, C, and B) components of Bacillus megaterium ASSPs in several respects, including sensitivity to a specific B. megaterium spore endopeptidase. However, they have pI's of 6.58, 6.67, and 7.96, all lower than those of any of the B. megaterium ASSPs. Although strains varied in the proportions of different ASSPs, to overall patterns seen on gel electrophoresis are constant. ASSPs are located interior to the cortex, presumably in the spore cytoplasm, and are synthesized during sporulation and degraded during germination.  相似文献   

11.
Western blotting methods have been used to assess the specificity of polyclonal antibodies raised against Bacillus globigii spore and vegetative cell preparations. None of the antibodies studied were completely species-specific in their recognition of spore surface epitopes. One polyclonal serum recognized several spore surface epitopes and demonstrated limited cross-reaction with the spore surface of the near-neighbour species B. subtilis. A second polyclonal serum, raised against aged spore antigens, recognized damaged spore epitopes primarily. Both of these antibodies also cross-reacted with vegetative cell epitopes present in all four Bacillus species (B. globigii, B. subtilis, B. cereus and B. anthracis) studied.  相似文献   

12.
Differentially expressed and immunogenic spore proteins of the Bacillus cereus group of bacteria, which includes Bacillus anthracis, Bacillus cereus, and Bacillus thuringiensis, were identified. Comparative proteomic profiling of their spore proteins distinguished the three species from each other as well as the virulent from the avirulent strains. A total of 458 proteins encoded by 232 open reading frames were identified by matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time-of-flight mass spectrometry analysis for all the species. A number of highly expressed proteins, including elongation factor Tu (EF-Tu), elongation factor G, 60-kDa chaperonin, enolase, pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, and others exist as charge variants on two-dimensional gels. These charge variants have similar masses but different isoelectric points. The majority of identified proteins have cellular roles associated with energy production, carbohydrate transport and metabolism, amino acid transport and metabolism, posttranslational modifications, and translation. Novel vaccine candidate proteins were identified using B. anthracis polyclonal antisera from humans postinfected with cutaneous anthrax. Fifteen immunoreactive proteins were identified in B. anthracis spores, whereas 7, 14, and 7 immunoreactive proteins were identified for B. cereus and in the virulent and avirulent strains of B. thuringiensis spores, respectively. Some of the immunodominant antigens include charge variants of EF-Tu, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase, dihydrolipoamide acetyltransferase, Delta-1-pyrroline-5-carboxylate dehydrogenase, and a dihydrolipoamide dehydrogenase. Alanine racemase and neutral protease were uniquely immunogenic to B. anthracis. Comparative analysis of the spore immunome will be of significance for further nucleic acid- and immuno-based detection systems as well as next-generation vaccine development.  相似文献   

13.
After a few minutes of germination, nucleoids in the great majority of spores of Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus megaterium were ring shaped. The major spore DNA binding proteins, the alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble proteins (SASP), colocalized to these nucleoid rings early in spore germination, as did the B. megaterium homolog of the major B. subtilis chromosomal protein HBsu. The percentage of ring-shaped nucleoids was decreased in germinated spores with lower levels of alpha/beta-type SASP. As spore outgrowth proceeded, the ring-shaped nucleoids disappeared and the nucleoid became more compact. This change took place after degradation of most of the spores' pool of major alpha/beta-type SASP and was delayed when alpha/beta-type SASP degradation was delayed. Later in spore outgrowth, the shape of the nucleoid reverted to the diffuse lobular shape seen in growing cells.  相似文献   

14.
Previous work has shown that the degradation of 20% of total protein which occurs early in germination of Bacillus megaterium spores is initiated by an endoprotease. This enzyme is found only in the spore and is active only on the spore proteins degraded during germination. Action of the spore protease in vitro on the three major proteins (Proteins A, B, and C) which are degraded in vivo during germination results in cleavage of one (A and C protein) or two (B protein) peptide bonds. The sequences surrounding the cleavage sites are -Tyr-Glu- Ile-Ala-Ser-Glu-Phe- in the A protein, -Phe-Glu- Ile-Ala-Ser-Glu-Phe- in the C protein, and -Thr-Glu- Phe-Gly-Ser-Glu-Thr-, and -Thr-Glu- Phe-Ala-Ser-Glu-Thr- in the B protein, with cleavage taking place at the glutamyl bond noted by the arrow. The similarity of these four sequences suggests the possibility that the specificity of the spore protease may be due to its requirement for a specific pentapeptide sequence of the type -R-Glu-(Phe or Ile)-(Gly or Ala)-Ser-Glu-R- for recognition and cleavage. However, it is also possible that it is the conformation of the A, B, and C proteins which determines their site of cleavage by the spore protease.  相似文献   

15.
Fluorescein-conjugated rabbit antibodies to formalized spores of Bacillus anthracis were tested against strains of B. anthracis and other Bacillus species in a subjective immunofluorescence test. The lack of reaction of B. anthracis Vollum spores with conjugated antibody raised against B. anthracis Sterne spores indicated that spores of the Vollum strain lacked a major surface antigen present in most of the other anthrax strains tested, including the non-encapsulated strains Sterne and the Soviet ST1, variants cured of the pX01 plasmid that codes for the toxin, and several virulent strains. Four other antibody preparations, raised against B. anthracis Vollum, New Hampshire, Ames and Strain 15, reacted to an approximately similar degree with spores of all four strains and of Sterne, indicating that Vollum has at least one spore antigen in common with these other strains. The anti-Sterne and anti-Vollum conjugates both displayed cross-reactions with spores of strains of B. cereus, B. coagulans, B. subtilis, B. megaterium, B. polymyxa, B. pumilus and B. thuringiensis. Absorption of the anti-anthrax conjugates with B. cereus NCTC 8035 and NCTC 10320 removed all these cross-reactions, demonstrating the existence of spore antigens specific for anthrax.  相似文献   

16.
Fluorescein-conjugated rabbit antibodies to formalized spores of Bacillus anthracis were tested against strains of B. anthracis and other Bacillus species in a subjective immunofluorescence test. The lack of reaction of B. anthracis Vollum spores with conjugated antibody raised against B. anthracis Sterne spores indicated that spores of the Vollum strain lacked a major surface antigen present in most of the other anthrax strains tested, including the non-encapsulated strains Sterne and the Soviet ST1, variants cured of the pX01 plasmid that codes for the toxin, and several virulent strains. Four other antibody preparations, raised against B, anthracis Vollum, New Hampshire, Ames and Strain 15, reacted to an approximately similar degree with spores of all four strains and of Sterne, indicating that Vollum has at least one spore antigen in common with these other strains. The anti-Sterne and anti-Vollum conjugates both displayed cross-reactions with spores of strains of B. cereus, B. coagulans, B. subtilis, B. megaterium, B. polymyxa, B. pumilus and B. thuringiensis. Absorption of the anti-anthrax conjugates with B. cereus NCTC 8035 and NCTC 10320 removed all these cross-reactions, demonstrating the existence of spore antigens specific for anthrax.  相似文献   

17.
Four genes (ssp genes) coding for small, acid-soluble spore proteins of Bacillus megaterium and the gene for the protease that cleaves them during germination were cloned in the integratable plasmid pJH101. Each plasmid was integrated into the B. megaterium chromosome by a Campbell-type mechanism, allowing mapping of all five genes. The gene for the small, acid-soluble spore protein-specific protease (gpr) mapped near rib, and the sspA gene mapped between argA and hisA. The three other genes of the spp gene family (sspB, -D, and -F) all mapped near metC/D, with the order: sspF-sspD-metC/D-hemA-argO-sspB. While neither gpr nor sspF has been mapped in B. subtilis, the positions of the sspA, -B, and -D loci are similar in B. megaterium and B. subtilis, suggesting that the members of this multigene family have not recently undergone significant movement on the chromosome. It appears that more gene rearrangement has occurred in the flanking genes than has occurred in the ssp family of genes producing the small, acid-soluble spore proteins.  相似文献   

18.
Raman spectroscopy and differential interference contrast (DIC) microscopy were used to monitor the kinetics of nutrient and nonnutrient germination of multiple individual untreated and wet-heat-treated spores of Bacillus cereus and Bacillus megaterium, as well as of several isogenic Bacillus subtilis strains. Major conclusions from this work were as follows. (i) More than 90% of these spores were nonculturable but retained their 1:1 chelate of Ca2+ and dipicolinic acid (CaDPA) when incubated in water at 80 to 95°C for 5 to 30 min. (ii) Wet-heat treatment significantly increased the time, T(lag), at which spores began release of the great majority of their CaDPA during the germination of B. subtilis spores with different nutrient germinants and also increased the variability of T(lag) values. (iii) The time period, ΔT(release), between T(lag) and the time, T(release), at which a spore germinating with nutrients completed the release of the great majority of its CaDPA, was also increased in wet-heat-treated spores. (iv) Wet-heat-treated spores germinating with nutrients had higher values of I(release), the intensity of a spore's DIC image at T(release), than did untreated spores and had much longer time periods, ΔT(lys), for the reduction in I(release) intensities to the basal value due to hydrolysis of the spore's peptidoglycan cortex, probably due at least in part to damage to the cortex-lytic enzyme CwlJ. (v) Increases in T(lag) and ΔT(release) were also observed when wet-heat-treated B. subtilis spores were germinated with the nonnutrient dodecylamine, while the change in I(release) was less significant. (vi) The effects of wet-heat treatment on nutrient germination of B. cereus and B. megaterium spores were generally similar to those on B. subtilis spores. These results indicate that (i) some proteins important in spore germination are damaged by wet-heat treatment, (ii) the cortex-lytic enzyme CwlJ is one germination protein damaged by wet heat, and (iii) the CaDPA release process itself seems likely to be the target of wet-heat damage which has the greatest effect on spore germination.  相似文献   

19.
The exosporium is the outermost layer of spores of Bacillus cereus and its close relatives Bacillus anthracis and Bacillus thuringiensis. For these pathogens, it represents the surface layer that makes initial contact with the host. To date, only the BclA glycoprotein has been described as a component of the exosporium; this paper defines 10 more tightly associated proteins from the exosporium of B. cereus ATCC 10876, identified by N-terminal sequencing of proteins from purified, washed exosporium. Likely coding sequences were identified from the incomplete genome sequence of B. anthracis or B. cereus ATCC 14579, and the precise corresponding sequence from B. cereus ATCC 10876 was defined by PCR and sequencing. Eight genes encode likely structural components (exsB, exsC, exsD, exsE, exsF, exsG, exsJ, and cotE). Several proteins of the exosporium are related to morphogenetic and outer spore coat proteins of B. subtilis, but most do not have homologues in B. subtilis. ExsE is processed from a larger precursor, and the CotE homologue appears to have been C-terminally truncated. ExsJ contains a domain of GXX collagen-like repeats, like the BclA exosporium protein of B. anthracis. Although most of the exosporium genes are scattered on the genome, bclA and exsF are clustered in a region flanking the rhamnose biosynthesis operon; rhamnose is part of the sugar moiety of spore glycoproteins. Two enzymes, alanine racemase and nucleoside hydrolase, are tightly adsorbed to the exosporium layer; they could metabolize small molecule germinants and may reduce the sensitivity of spores to these, limiting premature germination.  相似文献   

20.
The amino acid sequence-specific protease (termed GPR) in the bacterium Bacillus megaterium initiates the rapid degradation of small, acid-soluble spore proteins during the germination of spores of this organism. GPR is synthesized during spore formation as an inactive zymogen termed P46, which later autoprocesses to a smaller active form termed P41, which acts during spore germination. However, GPR exhibits no obvious mechanistic or amino acid sequence similarity to any of the known classes of proteases. To initiate the determination of the mechanisms of P46 to P41 conversion, P46 inactivity, and P41 catalysis, B. megaterium GPR has been overexpressed in Escherichia coli and purified to homogeneity by anion-exchange and size exclusion chromatography, and crystals of both P46 and P41 have been obtained by the vapor diffusion method. P46 crystals diffracted x rays to 3.5 A but the crystals of P41 diffracted x rays to only 6.5 A. A native x-ray diffraction data set of P46 has been collected; the unit cell parameters are a = b = 76.8, c = 313.1 A, alpha = beta = gamma = 90 degrees; the space group is tetragonal P41212 or P43212. The asymmetric unit contains two monomeric molecules with a crystal volume per unit protein mass of 2. 85 A3/Da and a solvent content of about 57%. An isomorphous heavy atom derivative data set has also been obtained for P46 crystals with potassium dicyanoaurate (I).  相似文献   

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