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1.
Germination of dormant spores of Bacillus species is initiated when nutrient germinants bind to germinant receptors in spores’ inner membrane and this interaction triggers the release of dipicolinic acid and cations from the spore core and their replacement by water. Bacillus subtilis spores contain three functional germinant receptors encoded by the gerA, gerB, and gerK operons. The GerA germinant receptor alone triggers germination with L-valine or L-alanine, and the GerB and GerK germinant receptors together trigger germination with a mixture of L-asparagine, D-glucose, D-fructose and KCl (AGFK). Recently, it was reported that the B. subtilis gerW gene is expressed only during sporulation in developing spores, and that GerW is essential for L-alanine germination of B. subtilis spores but not for germination with AGFK. However, we now find that loss of the B. subtilis gerW gene had no significant effects on: i) rates of spore germination with L-alanine; ii) spores’ levels of germination proteins including GerA germinant receptor subunits; iii) AGFK germination; iv) spore germination by germinant receptor-independent pathways; and v) outgrowth of germinated spores. Studies in Bacillus megaterium did find that gerW was expressed in the developing spore during sporulation, and in a temperature-dependent manner. However, disruption of gerW again had no effect on the germination of B. megaterium spores, whether germination was triggered via germinant receptor-dependent or germinant receptor-independent pathways.  相似文献   

2.
The rates of germination of Bacillus subtilis spores with L-alanine were increased markedly, in particular at low L-alanine concentrations, by overexpression of the tricistronic gerA operon that encodes the spore's germinant receptor for L-alanine but not by overexpression of gerA operon homologs encoding receptors for other germinants. However, spores with elevated levels of the GerA proteins did not germinate more rapidly in a mixture of asparagine, glucose, fructose, and K(+) (AGFK), a germinant combination that requires the participation of at least the germinant receptors encoded by the tricistronic gerB and gerK operons. Overexpression of the gerB or gerK operon or both the gerB and gerK operons also did not stimulate spore germination in AGFK. Overexpression of a mutant gerB operon, termed gerB*, that encodes a receptor allowing spore germination in response to either D-alanine or L-asparagine also caused faster spore germination with these germinants, again with the largest enhancement of spore germination rates at lower germinant concentrations. However, the magnitudes of the increases in the germination rates with D-alanine or L-asparagine in spores overexpressing gerB* were well below the increases in the spore's levels of the GerBA protein. Germination of gerB* spores with D-alanine or L-asparagine did not require participation of the products of the gerK operon, but germination with these agents was decreased markedly in spores also overexpressing gerA. These findings suggest that (i) increases in the levels of germinant receptors that respond to single germinants can increase spore germination rates significantly; (ii) there is some maximum rate of spore germination above which stimulation of GerA operon receptors alone will not further increase the rate of spore germination, as action of some protein other than the germinant receptors can become rate limiting; (iii) while previous work has shown that the wild-type GerB and GerK receptors interact in some fashion to cause spore germination in AGFK, there also appears to be an additional component required for AGFK-triggered spore germination; (iv) activation of the GerB receptor with D-alanine or L-asparagine can trigger spore germination independently of the GerK receptor; and (v) it is likely that the different germinant receptors interact directly and/or compete with each other for some additional component needed for initiation of spore germination. We also found that very high levels of overexpression of the gerA or gerK operon (but not the gerB or gerB* operon) in the forespore blocked sporulation shortly after the engulfment stage, although sporulation appeared normal with the lower levels of gerA or gerK overexpression that were used to generate spores for analysis of rates of germination.  相似文献   

3.
A rapid method for the determination of bacterial fatty acid composition   总被引:10,自引:1,他引:9  
Heat treatment of spores of non-proteolytic strains of Clostridium botulinum at 75–90°C, and enumeration of survivors on a nutrient medium containing lysozyme gave biphasic survival curves. A majority of spores were inactivated rapidly by heating, and the apparent heat-resistance of these spores was similar to that observed by enumeration on medium without lysozyme. A minority of spores showed much greater heat-resistance, due to the fact that the spore coat was permeable to lysozyme, which diffused into the spore from the medium and replaced the heat-inactivated germination system. The proportion of heated spores permeable to lysozyme was between 0.2 and 1.4% for spores of strains 17B (type B) and Beluga (type E), but was about 20% for spores of strain Foster B96 (type E). After treatment of heated spores with alkaline thioglycolate, all were permeable to lysozyme. D-values for heated spores that were permeable to lysozyme (naturally and after treatment with thioglycolate) were: for strain 17B, D85°C, 100 min; D90°C, 18.7 min; D95°C, 4.4 min; for strain Beluga, D85°C, 46 min; D90°C, 11.8 min; D95°C, 2.8 min. The z-values for these spores of strains 17B and Beluga were 7.6°C and 8.3°C.  相似文献   

4.
Spores of Bacillus subtilis possess a thick protein coat that consists of an electron-dense outer coat layer and a lamellalike inner coat layer. The spore coat has been shown to confer resistance to lysozyme and other sporicidal substances. In this study, spore coat-defective mutants of B. subtilis (containing the gerE36 and/or cotE::cat mutation) were used to study the relative contributions of spore coat layers to spore resistance to hydrogen peroxide (H(2)O(2)) and various artificial and solar UV treatments. Spores of strains carrying mutations in gerE and/or cotE were very sensitive to lysozyme and to 5% H(2)O(2), as were chemically decoated spores of the wild-type parental strain. Spores of all coat-defective strains were as resistant to 254-nm UV-C radiation as wild-type spores were. Spores possessing the gerE36 mutation were significantly more sensitive to artificial UV-B and solar UV radiation than wild-type spores were. In contrast, spores of strains possessing the cotE::cat mutation were significantly more resistant to all of the UV treatments used than wild-type spores were. Spores of strains carrying both the gerE36 and cotE::cat mutations behaved like gerE36 mutant spores. Our results indicate that the spore coat, particularly the inner coat layer, plays a role in spore resistance to environmentally relevant UV wavelengths.  相似文献   

5.
The distribution of penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) within different membranes of sporulating cells of Bacillus subtilis was examined in an effort to correlate the location of individual PBPs with their proposed involvement in either cortical or vegetative peptidoglycan synthesis. The PBP composition of forespores was determined by two methods: examination of isolated forespore membranes and assay of the in vivo accessibility of the PBPs to penicillin. In both cases, it was apparent that PBP 5*, the major PBP synthesized during sporulation, was present primarily, but not exclusively, in the forespore. The membranes from mature dormant spores were prepared by either chemically stripping the integument layers of the spores, followed by lysozyme digestion, or lysozyme digestion alone of coat-defective gerE spores. PBP 5* was detected in membranes from unstripped spores but was never found in stripped ones, which suggests that the primary location of this PBP is the outer forespore membrane. This is consistent with a role for PBP 5* exclusively in cortex synthesis. In contrast, vegetative PBPs 1 and 2A were only observed in stripped spore preparations that were greatly enriched for the inner forespore membrane, which supports the proposed requirement for these PBPs early in germination. The apparent presence of PBP 3 in both membranes of the spore reinforces the suggestion that it catalyzes a step common to both cortical and vegetative peptidoglycan synthesis.  相似文献   

6.
Bacillus cereus T spores were prepared on fortified nutrient agar, and the spore coat and outer membrane were extracted by 0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate-100 mM dithiothreitol in 0.1 M sodium chloride (SDS-DTT) at pH 10.5 (coat-defective spores). Coat-defective spores in L-alanine plus adenosine germinated slowly and to a lesser extent than spores not treated with SDS-DTT, as determined by decrease in absorbance and release of dipicolinic acid and Ca2+. Spores germinated in calcium dipicolinate only after treatment with SDS-DTT. Biphasic and triphasic germination kinetics were observed with normal and coat-defective spores, respectively, in an environment with temperature increasing from 20 to 65 degrees C at a rate of 1 degree C/min. Therefore, the physical and biochemical processes involved in germination are modified by coat removal. The data suggest that a portion of the germination apparatus located interior to the coat may be protected by the coat and outer membrane or that the coat and outer membrane otherwise enhance germination in L-alanine plus adenosine. When coat-defective spores were heat activated with the dialyzed (12,000-Mr cutoff) components extracted from the spores, germination of the SDS-DTT-treated spores was enhanced; thus, one or more components located in the spore coat or outer membrane with a molecular weight greater than 12,000 were essential for fast germination.  相似文献   

7.
Involvement of the spore coat in germination of Bacillus cereus T spores   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Bacillus cereus T spores were prepared on fortified nutrient agar, and the spore coat and outer membrane were extracted by 0.5% sodium dodecyl sulfate-100 mM dithiothreitol in 0.1 M sodium chloride (SDS-DTT) at pH 10.5 (coat-defective spores). Coat-defective spores in L-alanine plus adenosine germinated slowly and to a lesser extent than spores not treated with SDS-DTT, as determined by decrease in absorbance and release of dipicolinic acid and Ca2+. Spores germinated in calcium dipicolinate only after treatment with SDS-DTT. Biphasic and triphasic germination kinetics were observed with normal and coat-defective spores, respectively, in an environment with temperature increasing from 20 to 65 degrees C at a rate of 1 degree C/min. Therefore, the physical and biochemical processes involved in germination are modified by coat removal. The data suggest that a portion of the germination apparatus located interior to the coat may be protected by the coat and outer membrane or that the coat and outer membrane otherwise enhance germination in L-alanine plus adenosine. When coat-defective spores were heat activated with the dialyzed (12,000-Mr cutoff) components extracted from the spores, germination of the SDS-DTT-treated spores was enhanced; thus, one or more components located in the spore coat or outer membrane with a molecular weight greater than 12,000 were essential for fast germination.  相似文献   

8.
The surface or coat-associated properties of Bacillus cereus T spores produced from modified G medium (MGM) and fortified nutrient agar (FNA) were compared. The two populations appeared structurally similar by transmission electron microscopy. Spores prepared on FNA were more susceptible to ozone inactivation than MGM-prepared spores. When activated by heating for 15 min at 70–85°C, FNA-prepared spores were optimally activated at 85°C and did not become hydrophilic on heat activation while MGM spores were optimally activated at 70°C and became hydrophilic on activation. Susceptibility to removal of coat and outer membrane by chemical and enzymatic extraction treatments was measured by monitoring reduced ability to germinate in nutrients and acquired ability to germinate in the presence of lysozyme. Bacillus cereus T MGM-prepared spores germinated in lysozyme upon<1 h exposure to sodium dodecyl sulphate-dithiothreitol. FNA-prepared spores were lysozyme sensitive after > 2 h treatment. Thus, B. cereus T FNA spore coats and outer membranes were more resistant to these denaturing agents. Transmission electron micrographs revealed no change in appearance of extracted spores. Sporulation environment must be considered when laboratory-prepared spores are used to assess or predict the effect of control procedures on spores present in nature.  相似文献   

9.
AIMS: To determine the mechanisms of killing of Bacillus subtilis spores by ethanol or strong acid or alkali. METHODS AND RESULTS: Killing of B. subtilis spores by ethanol or strong acid or alkali was not through DNA damage and the spore coats did not protect spores against these agents. Spores treated with ethanol or acid released their dipicolinic acid (DPA) in parallel with spore killing and the core wet density of ethanol- or acid-killed spores fell to a value close to that for untreated spores lacking DPA. The core regions of spores killed by these two agents were stained by nucleic acid stains that do not penetrate into the core of untreated spores and acid-killed spores appeared to have ruptured. Spores killed by these two agents also did not germinate in nutrient and non-nutrient germinants and were not recovered by lysozyme treatment. Spores killed by alkali did not lose their DPA, did not exhibit a decrease in their core wet density and their cores were not stained by nucleic acid stains. Alkali-killed spores released their DPA upon initiation of spore germination, but did not initiate metabolism and degraded their cortex very poorly. However, spores apparently killed by alkali were recovered by lysozyme treatment. CONCLUSIONS: The data suggest that spore killing by ethanol and strong acid involves the disruption of a spore permeability barrier, while spore killing by strong alkali is due to the inactivation of spore cortex lytic enzymes.SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The results provide further information on the mechanisms of spore killing by various chemicals.  相似文献   

10.
Sporulation of Streptomyces griseus in submerged culture.   总被引:4,自引:9,他引:4       下载免费PDF全文
A wild-type strain of Streptomyces griseus forms spores both on solid media (aerial spores) and in liquid culture (submerged spores). Both spore types are highly resistant to sonication, but only aerial spores are resistant to lysozyme digestion. Electron micrographs suggest that lysozyme sensitivity may result from the thinner walls of the submerged spores. Studies of the life cycle indicate that neither streptomycin excretion nor extracellular protease activity is required for sporulation: the analysis of mutants, however, suggests that antibiotic production may be correlated with the ability to sporulate. A method was devised to induce the rapid sporulation of S. griseus in a submerged culture. This method, which depends on nutrient deprivation, was used to determine that either ammonia or phosphate starvation can trigger sporulation and that the enzyme glutamine synthetase may be useful as a sporulation marker after phosphate deprivation.  相似文献   

11.
Aims: To determine effects of inner membrane lipid composition on Bacillus subtilis sporulation and spore properties. Methods and Results: The absence of genes encoding lipid biosynthetic enzymes had no effect on B. subtilis sporulation, although the expected lipids were absent from spores’ inner membrane. The rate of spore germination with nutrients was decreased c. 50% with mutants that lacked the major cardiolipin (CL) synthase and another enzyme for synthesis of a major phospholipid. Spores lacking the minor CL synthase or an enzyme essential for glycolipid synthesis exhibited 50–150% increases in rates of dodecylamine germination, while spores lacking enzymes for phosphatidylethanolamine (PE), phosphatidylserine (PS) and lysylphosphatidylglycerol (l‐PG) synthesis exhibited a 30–50% decrease. Spore sensitivity to H2O2 and tert‐butylhydroperoxide was increased 30–60% in the absence of the major CL synthase, but these spores’ sensitivity to NaOCl or Oxone? was unaffected. Spores of lipid synthesis mutants were less resistant to wet heat, with spores lacking enzymes for PE, PS or l‐PG synthesis exhibiting a two to threefold decrease and spores of other strains exhibiting a four to 10‐fold decrease. The decrease in spore wet heat resistance correlated with an increase in core water content. Conclusions: Changing the lipid composition of the B. subtilis inner membrane did not affect sporulation, although modest effects on spore germination and wet heat and oxidizing agent sensitivity were observed, especially when multiple lipids were absent. The increases in rates of dodecylamine germination were likely due to increased ability of this compound to interact with the spore’s inner membrane in the absence of some CL and glycolipids. The effects on spore wet heat sensitivity are likely indirect, because they were correlated with changes in core water content. Significance and Impact of the Study: The results of this study provide insight into roles of inner membrane lipids in spore properties.  相似文献   

12.
A Moir 《Journal of bacteriology》1981,146(3):1106-1116
The presence of the gerE36 mutation in strains of Bacillus subtilis 168 resulted in poor germination of their spores in a range of germinants, as measured by the fall in absorbance of spore suspensions. Although resistant to heat and organic solvents, spores were sensitive to lysozyme; electron microscopy revealed that their coat structure was incomplete. These spores responded to germinants by losing heat resistance and changing from phase bright to phase gray. The release of dipicolinic acid and the fall in absorbance of spore suspensions reached only 75 and 50% of wild-type levels, respectively, but followed the same time course as the loss of heat resistance. Although the germination response was incomplete, the concentration of L-alanine required to elicit it was the same for the mutant as for the wild type. The properties of mutant spores suggest that an intact spore coat is not required for the initial interaction between germinant and spore, but that the coat layers may contain molecules important in later stages of germination. In transduction with phage SPP1, the gerE36 mutation mapped between citF and ilvB and was 90% cotransduced with citF2. The gerE mutation identifies the location of a gene important for the progress of late stages of spore formation.  相似文献   

13.
In this work, we have used spores of Bacillus subtilis that specifically induce bioluminescence upon initiation of germination as a rapid, real-time monitor of the effects of preservative treatments on germination. Using this tool, we have demonstrated that the combination of mild acidity (pH 5.5 to 5.0), lactic acid (0. 5%), and a pasteurization step (90 degrees C for 5 min) results in enhanced inhibition of spore germination compared with the effects of the individual treatments alone. Inhibition by the combination treatment occurred as a result of both direct but reversible inhibition, entirely dependent on the physical presence of the preservative factors, and permanent, nonreversible damage to the L-alanine germination apparatus of the spore. However, we were able to restore germination of the preservative-damaged spores unable to germinate on L-alanine by supplementing the medium with the nonnutrient germinant calcium dipicolinic acid. The demonstration that simple combinations of preservative factors inhibit spore germination indicates that food preservation systems providing ambient stability could be designed which do not adhere to the strict limits set by commonly accepted processes and which are based on precise understanding of their inhibitory action.  相似文献   

14.
15.
Clostridium botulinum spores were sublethally damaged by exposure to 12 or 28 micrograms of available chlorine per ml for 2 min at 25 degrees C and pH 7.0. The damaging dose was 2.7 x 10(-6) to 3.1 x 10(-6) micrograms of available chlorine per spore. Damage was manifested by a consistent 1.6 to 2.4 log difference between the most probable number enumeration of spores (modified peptone colloid medium) and the colony count (modified peptone yeast extract glucose agar); this did not occur with control spores. Damaged spores could be enumerated by the colony count procedure. Germination responses were measured in several defined and nondefined media. Hypochlorite treatment altered the rate and extent of germination in some of the media. Calcium lactate (9 mM) permitted L-alanine (4.5 mM) germination of hypochlorite-treated spores in a medium containing 12 or 55 mM sodium bicarbonate, 0.8 mM sodium thiosulfate, and 100 mM Tris-hydrochloride (pH 7.0) buffer. Tryptose inhibited L-alanine germination of the spores. Treatments with hypochlorite and with hydrogen peroxide (7%, 25 degrees C, 2 min) caused similar enumeration and germination responses, indicating that the effect was due to a general oxidation phenomenon.  相似文献   

16.
Clostridium botulinum spores were sublethally damaged by exposure to 12 or 28 micrograms of available chlorine per ml for 2 min at 25 degrees C and pH 7.0. The damaging dose was 2.7 x 10(-6) to 3.1 x 10(-6) micrograms of available chlorine per spore. Damage was manifested by a consistent 1.6 to 2.4 log difference between the most probable number enumeration of spores (modified peptone colloid medium) and the colony count (modified peptone yeast extract glucose agar); this did not occur with control spores. Damaged spores could be enumerated by the colony count procedure. Germination responses were measured in several defined and nondefined media. Hypochlorite treatment altered the rate and extent of germination in some of the media. Calcium lactate (9 mM) permitted L-alanine (4.5 mM) germination of hypochlorite-treated spores in a medium containing 12 or 55 mM sodium bicarbonate, 0.8 mM sodium thiosulfate, and 100 mM Tris-hydrochloride (pH 7.0) buffer. Tryptose inhibited L-alanine germination of the spores. Treatments with hypochlorite and with hydrogen peroxide (7%, 25 degrees C, 2 min) caused similar enumeration and germination responses, indicating that the effect was due to a general oxidation phenomenon.  相似文献   

17.
Formation of Protoplasts from Resting Spores   总被引:25,自引:11,他引:14       下载免费PDF全文
Coat-stripped spores suspended in hypertonic solutions and supplied with two essential cations can be converted into viable protoplasts by lysozyme digestion of both cortex and germ cell wall. Calcium ions are necessary to prevent membrane rupture, and magnesium ions are necessary for changes indicative of hydration of the core, particularily the nuclear mass. Since remnant spore coat covered such protoplasts of Bacillus subtilis and the germ cell wall of B. cereus spores is not lysozyme digestible, coatless spores of B. megaterium KM were more useful for these studies. Lysozyme digestion in cation-free environment produced a peculiar semi-refractile spore core free of a cortex but prone to rapid hydration and lytic changes on the addition of cations. Strontium could replace Ca(2+) but Mn(2+) could not replace Mg(2+) in these digestions. When added to the spores, dipicolinic acid and other chelates appeared to compete with the membrane for the calcium needed for stabilization during lysozyme conversion to protoplasts. It is argued that calcium could function to stabilize the inner membrane anionic groups over the anhydrous dipicolinic acid-containing core of resting spores.  相似文献   

18.
Refrigerated processed foods of extended durability rely on a mild heat treatment combined with refrigerated storage to ensure microbiological safety and quality. The principal microbiological safety risk in foods of this type is non-proteolytic Clostridium botulinum. In this article the combined effect of mild heat treatment and refrigerated storage on the time to growth and probability of growth from spores of non-proteolytic Cl. botulinum is described. Spores of non-proteolytic Cl. botulinum (two strains each of type B, E and F) were heated at 90°C for between 0 and 60 min and subsequently incubated at 5°, 10° or 30°C in PYGS broth in the presence or absence of lysozyme. The number of spores that resulted in turbidity depended on the combination of heat treatment, incubation time and incubation temperature they received. Heating at 90°C for 1 or more min ensured a 106 reduction when spores were subsequently incubated at 5°C for up to 23 weeks. Heating at 90°C for 60 min ensured a 106 reduction over 23 weeks when subsequent incubation was at 10°C in the presence of added lysozyme. The same treatment did not reduce the spore population by 106 when subsequent incubation was at 30°C.  相似文献   

19.
Antibodies were raised against purified germination-specific cortex-lytic enzyme (GSLE) from spores of Bacillus megaterium KM which neutralized the ability of GSLE to germinate permeabilized spores. Western blotting of dormant spore and vegetative cell fractions separated by SDS-PAGE demonstrated that GSLE is spore-specific and that greater than 90% of the GSLE is associated with the dormant spore cortex peptidoglycan as a phosphorylated 63kD pro-form, which could only be visualized after lysozyme digestion of the peptidoglycan. During germination, the 63kD pro-form of GSLE is processed to release the active enzyme, which had an apparent molecular weight of 30kD. Inhibitor studies demonstrated that GSLE activation occurs as part of the commitment reaction and thus represents the first-identified enzymatic event to occur during germination triggering. Proteins that cross-react with anti-GSLE sera are present in spore fractions of other species.  相似文献   

20.
Bacterial spores are resistant to a wide range of chemical and physical insults that are normally lethal for the vegetative form of the bacterium. While the integrity of the protein coat of the spore is crucial for spore survival in vitro, far less is known about how the coat provides protection in vivo against predation by ecologically relevant hosts. In particular, assays had characterized the in vitro resistance of spores to peptidoglycan-hydrolyzing enzymes like lysozyme that are also important effectors of innate immunity in a wide variety of hosts. Here, we use the bacteriovorous nematode Caenorhabditis elegans, a likely predator of Bacillus spores in the wild, to characterize the role of the spore coat in an ecologically relevant spore-host interaction. We found that ingested wild-type Bacillus subtilis spores were resistant to worm digestion, whereas vegetative forms of the bacterium were efficiently digested by the nematode. Using B. subtilis strains carrying mutations in spore coat genes, we observed a correlation between the degree of alteration of the spore coat assembly and the susceptibility to the worm degradation. Surprisingly, we found that the spores that were resistant to lysozyme in vitro can be sensitive to C. elegans digestion depending on the extent of the spore coat structure modifications.  相似文献   

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