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1.
Survival of spores of the fungus Rhizopus nigricans after repeated freezing and thawing was investigated. The cooling rate was 10(4) degrees C/min. Dry spores were fully inactive after 32 repeated shocks. About one-half of spores were killed after 8 repetitions. The water content did not change the resistance, swollen spores reacted to shocks much like dry ones. The sensitivity of spores to freezing-thawing shocks increased considerably when the spores changed from the dormant to the active state. Already after a 30 min cultivation of spores in the nutrient medium two freezing and thawings were sufficient for inactivation of 60% spores. After a 90 min cultivation one freezing and one thawing were sufficient to inactivate practically all spores.  相似文献   

2.
The effect of ultraviolet light on the microsporidian Octosporea muscaedomesticae in relation to infection in the adult black blowfly, Phormia regina, was investigated. A 30-Watt germicidal lamp, 253.7-nm wavelength, was used as source of uv light in five investigations. In addition, sunlight served as a uv source in two studies. Viable naked dried spores exposed to the uv lamp at a distance of 10 cm were killed after 15 min. Viable naked spores in an aqueous suspension were killed after 30 min of exposure to the uv lamp and after 3 hr of exposure to bright sunlight, respectively. Daily 30-min uv lamp exposures on living hosts harboring all life phases of the parasite did not interfere with the ensuing infection in the blowfly's midgut and the pathogen's developmental cycle. Spores harvested from uv-treated infected hosts were found to be as infective as spores retrieved from hosts not treated with uv. Spores contained in dried fecal droplets and exposed up to 3 hr to the uv lamp, or 12 hr to bright sunlight, respectively, remained infective. Addition of uric acid to a preparation of naked spores prior to 15- and 30-min uv irradiations yielded 100% infection in both host groups. A uv-protective function is ascribed to components provided by the host's tissues and feces.  相似文献   

3.
Laboratory experiments on sugar-beet downy mildew (Peronospora farinosa)   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The optimum conditions for Peronospora farinosa betae to produce spores were temperature 8–10 °C and relative humidity 90 % or more, but many spores were produced between 5 and 20 °C and between 80 and 90 % R.H. Most spores were formed in darkness after leaves were exposed to light for 6–8 h. Spores survived exposure to 60 % R.H. for up to 5 days, but were soon killed by temperatures above 20 °C. The germination capacity of spores collected from the field was often very small, but this could not be related to the weather. Most seedlings were infected when inoculated at the growing point and incubated in a saturated atmosphere between 3 and 15 °C for at least 8 h.  相似文献   

4.
Role of DNA repair in Bacillus subtilis spore resistance.   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10       下载免费PDF全文
Wet-heat or hydrogen peroxide treatment of wild-type Bacillus subtilis spores did not result in induction of lacZ fusions to three DNA repair-related genes (dinR, recA, and uvrC) during spore outgrowth. However, these genes were induced during outgrowth of wild-type spores treated with dry heat or UV. Wet-heat, desiccation, dry-heat, or UV treatment of spores lacking major DNA-binding proteins (termed alpha-beta- spores) also resulted in induction of the three DNA repair genes during spore outgrowth. Hydrogen peroxide treatment of alpha-beta-spores did not result in induction of dinR- and rerA-lacZ but did cause induction of uvrC-lacZ during spore outgrowth. Spores of a recA mutant were approximately twofold more UV sensitive and approximately ninefold more sensitive to dry heat than were wild-type spores but were no more sensitive to wet heat and hydrogen peroxide. In contrast, alpha-beta- recA spores were significantly more sensitive than were alpha-beta- spores to all four treatments, as well as to desiccation. Surprisingly, RecA levels were quite low in dormant spores, but RecA was synthesized during spore outgrowth. Taken together, these data (i) are consistent with previous suggestions that some treatments (dry heat and UV with wild-type spores; desiccation, dry and wet heat, hydrogen peroxide, and UV with alpha-beta- spores) that kill spores do so in large part by causing DNA damage and (ii) indicate that repair of DNA damage during spore outgrowth is an important component of spore resistance to a number of treatments, as has been shown previously for UV.  相似文献   

5.
AIMS: To determine if treatment of Bacillus subtilis spores with a variety of oxidizing agents causes damage to the spore's inner membrane. METHODS AND RESULTS: Spores of B. subtilis were killed 80-99% with wet heat or a variety of oxidizing agents, including betadine, chlorine dioxide, cumene hydroperoxide, hydrogen peroxide, Oxone, ozone, sodium hypochlorite and t-butylhydroperoxide, and the agents neutralized and/or removed. Survivors of spores pretreated with oxidizing agents exhibited increased sensitivity to killing by a normally minimal lethal heat treatment, while spores pretreated with wet heat did not. In addition, spores treated with wet heat or the oxidizing agents, except sodium hypochlorite, were more sensitive to high NaCl in plating media than were untreated spores. The core region of spores treated with at least two oxidizing agents was also penetrated much more readily by methylamine than was the core of untreated spores, and spores treated with oxidizing agents but not wet heat germinated faster with dodecylamine than did untreated spores. Spores of strains with very different levels of unsaturated fatty acids in their inner membrane exhibited essentially identical resistance to oxidizing agents. CONCLUSIONS: Treatment of spores with oxidizing agents has been suggested to cause damage to the spore's inner membrane, a membrane whose integrity is essential for spore viability. The sensitization of spores to killing by heat and to high salt after pretreatment with oxidizing agents is consistent with and supports this suggestion. Presumably mild pretreatment with oxidizing agents causes some damage to the spore's inner membrane. While this damage may not be lethal under normal conditions, the damaged inner membrane may be less able to maintain its integrity, when dormant spores are exposed to high temperature or when germinated spores are faced with osmotic stress. Triggering of spore germination by dodecylamine likely involves action by this agent on the spore's inner membrane allowing release of the spore core's depot of dipicolinic acid. Presumably dodecylamine more readily alters the permeability of a damaged inner membrane and thus more readily triggers germination of spores pretreated with oxidizing agents. Damage to the inner spore membrane by oxidizing agents is also consistent with the more rapid penetration of methylamine into the core of treated spores, as the inner membrane is likely the crucial permeability barrier to methylamine entry into the spore core. As spores of strains with very different levels of unsaturated fatty acids in their inner membrane exhibited essentially identical resistance to oxidizing agents, it is not through oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids that oxidizing agents kill and/or damage spores. Perhaps these agents work by causing oxidative damage to key proteins in the spore's inner membrane. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: The more rapid heat killing and germination with dodecylamine, the greater permeability of the spore core and the osmotic stress sensitivity in outgrowth of spores pretreated with oxidizing agents is consistent with such agents causing damage to the spore's inner membrane, even if this damage is not lethal under normal conditions. It may be possible to take advantage of this phenomenon to devise improved, less costly regimens for spore inactivation.  相似文献   

6.
Cold shock and ethanol and puromycin stress responses in sporulating Bacillus subtilis cells have been investigated. We show that a total of 13 proteins are strongly induced after a short cold shock treatment of sporulating cells. The cold shock pretreatment affected the heat resistance of the spores formed subsequently, with spores heat killed at 85 or 90 degrees C being more heat resistant than the control spores while they were more heat sensitive than controls that were heat treated at 95 or 100 degrees C. However, B. subtilis spores with mutations in the main cold shock proteins, CspB, -C, and -D, did not display decreased heat resistance compared to controls, indicating that these proteins are not directly responsible for the increased heat resistance of the spores. The disappearance of the stress proteins later in sporulation suggests that they cannot be involved in repairing heat damage during spore germination and outgrowth but must alter spore structure in a way which increases or decreases heat resistance. Since heat, ethanol, and puromycin stress produce similar proteins and similar changes in spore heat resistance while cold shock is different in both respects, these alterations appear to be very specific.  相似文献   

7.
The outgrowth of spores of Bacillus subtilis 168 proceeded normally in temperature-sensitive DNA mutants under restrictive conditions and in the absence of DNA synthesis. Two inhibitors of DNA synthesis, nalidoxic acid and 6-(p-hydroxyphenylazo)-uracil, inhibited spore outgrowth under some nutritional conditions; this inhibition of outgrowth however, though not that of DNA synthesis, could be reversed by glucose. The sensitivity of the outgrowing spores to nalidixic acid and 6-(p-hydroxyphenylazo)-uracil inhbition decreased as a function of outgrowth time. The cells became completely resistant to the inhibitors after 90 min. The development of this resistance occurred also in the absence of DNA synthesis. It was concluded that DNA synthesis is not needed for spore outgrowth, and that outgrowing cells and vegetative cells differ in their sensitivity to these inhibitors.  相似文献   

8.
Bacillus brevis strain Nagano and its gramicidin S-negative mutant, BI-7, were compared with respect to germination of their spores produced in several media. Germination initiation occurred in the presence of nutrient broth orL-alanine but not with inosine, glucose, glycerol or fructose; the process was activated by heat. Parental and mutant spores behaved similarly in these experiments. During outgrowth, parental spores remained in this phase of germination much longer than did mutant spores, but only when the parental spores had been harvested from a sporulation medium where significant gramicidin S synthesis had occurred. When parental spores were extracted or treated with an enzyme that hydrolyzes gramicidin S, rapid outgrowth occurred. Adding exogenous gramicidin S or the extract from parental spores to mutant spores lengthened the outgrowth in a dose-dependent manner. The uptake of labeledL-alanine by parental spores was delayed compared to mutant spores in the presence or absence of chloramphenicol. These data suggest a mechanism of action for gramicidin S whereby it interferes in membrane function, such as transport or energy metabolism, in outgrowing spores.Abbreviations GS Gramicidin S - CFU colony-forming units  相似文献   

9.
The effect of visible radiations on the germination and outgrowth of spores of Bacillus subtilis MD2 and Bacillus subtilis var. niger was determined by direct observation of populations irradiated on the surface of nutrient agar. Little effect on germination (phase darkening) was found but white light prevented outgrowth of some and retarded it for all spores. Different wavebands in the visible spectrum differed in their effect on outgrowth, the greatest retardation being found for the shorter wavelengths, 410–570 nm. Outgrowth in dark controls was always greater both in number of spores outgrown and rate of outgrowth. The results are consistent with others, suggesting an effect of singlet oxygen generated from endogenous photosensitizers by visible radiation.  相似文献   

10.
Populations of Bacillus subtilis spores in which 90 to 99.9% of the spores had been killed by moist heat gave only two fractions on equilibrium density gradient centrifugation: a fraction comprised of less dense spores that had lost their dipicolinic acid (DPA), undergone significant protein denaturation, and were all dead and a fraction with the same higher density as that of unheated spores. The latter fraction from heat-killed spore populations retained all of its DPA, but ≥98% of the spores could be dead. The dead spores that retained DPA germinated relatively normally with nutrient and nonnutrient germinants, but the outgrowth of these germinated spores was significantly compromised, perhaps because they had suffered damage to some proteins such that metabolic activity during outgrowth was greatly decreased. These results indicate that DPA release takes place well after spore killing by moist heat and that DPA release during moist-heat treatment is an all-or-nothing phenomenon; these findings also suggest that damage to one or more key spore proteins causes spore killing by moist heat.  相似文献   

11.
Pretreatment with ethidium bromide (5 μg/ml) followed by a water wash had no effect on unheated Bacillus subtilis spores, but the viability of these spores after heating was much lower than that of similarly heated spores exposed to water alone. The fate of water- or ethidium bromide-treated spores, unheated or heated, was followed by allowing them to germinate and outgrow in a minimal or a complex liquid medium. Spores exposed to ethidium bromide and then heated (85°C, 10 min) exhibited a developmental block during germination and outgrowth. Many of them were blocked at the stage when the bacterium emerged from the germinated spore. When 0.35 μg of ethidium bromide per ml was added to heated spores in the germination-growth medium, the outgrowth of heated spores was inhibited to the same extent as were pretreated spores. Ethidium bromide acted in the first hour of germination of heated spores since addition after this time was ineffective in inhibiting recovery events. Repair of heat-damaged spore DNA was detected during the first 2 h of germination. The addition of ethidium bromide (final concentration, 0.35 μg/ml) inhibited DNA repair during early outgrowth. Increased sensitivity of spores to heat after pretreatment with sublethal concentrations of ethidium bromide was due to the inhibition of the repair of heat-damaged DNA.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
RNA was extracted from dormant and germinating Bacillus subtilis 168 spores (intact spores and chemically decoated spores) by using rapid rupture followed by acid–phenol extraction. Spore germination progress was monitored by assaying colony forming ability before and after heat shock and by reading the optical density at 600 nm. The purity, yield, and composition of the extracted RNA were determined spectrophotometrically from the ratio of absorption at 260 nm to that at 280 nm; in a 2100 BioAnalyzer, giving the RNA yield/108 spores or cells and the distribution pattern of rRNA components. The method reported here for the extraction of RNA from dormant spores, as well as during different phases of germination and outgrowth, has proven to be fast, efficient and simple to handle. RNA of a high purity was obtained from dormant spores and during all phases of germination and growth. There was a significant increase in RNA yield during the transition from dormant spores to germination and subsequent outgrowth. Chemically decoated spores were retarded in germination and outgrowth compared with intact spores, and less RNA was extracted; however, the differences were not significant. This method for RNA isolation of dormant, germinating, and outgrowing bacterial endospores is a valuable prerequisite for gene expression studies, especially in studies on the responses of spores to hostile environmental conditions.  相似文献   

14.
AIMS: To determine the mechanisms of Bacillus subtilis spore killing by and resistance to an acidic solution containing Fe(3+), EDTA, KI and ethanol termed the KMT reagent. METHODS AND RESULTS: Wild-type B. subtilis spores were not mutagenized by the KMT reagent but the wild-type and recA spores were killed at the same rate. Spores (alpha(-)beta(-)) lacking most DNA-protective alpha/beta-type small, acid-soluble spore proteins were less resistant to the KMT reagent than wild-type spores but were also not mutagenized, and alpha(-)beta(-) and alpha(-)beta(-)recA spores exhibited nearly identical resistance. Spore resistance to the KMT reagent was greatly decreased if spores had defective coats. However, the level of unsaturated fatty acids in the inner membrane did not determine spore sensitivity to the KMT reagent. Survivors in spore populations killed by the KMT reagent were sensitized to killing by wet heat or nitrous acid and to high salt in plating medium. KMT reagent-killed spores had not released their dipicolinic acid (DPA), although these killed spores released their DPA more readily when germinated with dodecylamine than did untreated spores. However, KMT reagent-killed spores did not germinate with nutrients or Ca(2+)-DPA and were recovered only poorly by lysozyme treatment in a hypertonic medium. CONCLUSIONS: The KMT reagent does not kill spores by DNA damage and a major factor in spore resistance to this reagent is the spore coat. KMT reagent treatment damages the spore's ability to germinate, perhaps by damaging the spore's inner membrane. However, this damage is not oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: These results provide information on the mechanism of spore resistance to and killing by the KMT reagent developed for killing Bacillus spores.  相似文献   

15.
We examined changes in mouse fecal microflora after various dietary components and Bacillus subtilis (natto) spores were delivered by intubation. The administration of intact spores of Bacillus subtilis (natto) did not affect fecal Enterobacteriaceae and Enterococcus spp. in all three diet groups; on the other hand, it did affect fecal Bacteroidaceae and Lactobacillus spp., depending upon the diets fed. The administration of autoclaved spores did not alter fecal microflora. In vitro cultures of Lactobacillus murinus obtained from mouse feces, together with Bacillus subtilis (natto) under aerobic conditions as a mixed culture, revealed that the growth of L. murinus was enhanced by the addition of intact spores of Bacillus subtilis (natto). This enhancement of growth was displayed only in media containing either sucrose, glucose, maltose, or fructose but not in media containing cornstarch, soluble starch, or microcrystalline cellulose. From these results it was evident that some metabolites of Bacillus subtilis (natto) produced during germination and (or) outgrowth of spores of this strain, requiring monosaccharides or oligosaccharides, participated in the enhancement of the growth of L. murinus.  相似文献   

16.
Susceptibility to UV irradiation of B. cereus BIS-59 spores undergoing germination at various stages-dormant spores to vegetative cell stage and their ability to recover from radiation damage were studied. For a given dose of radiation, the number of spore photoproducts (SPP) formed in the DNA of dormant spores was about 5-times greater than that of thymine dimers (TT) formed in the DNA of vegetative cells. At intermediate stages of the germination cycle, there was a rapid decline in the UV radiation-induced SPP formed in DNA with a concomitant increase in the UV radiation-induced TT formed in DNA. Bacterial spores undergoing germination (up to 3 hr) in the low nutrient medium (0.3% yeast extract) displayed much higher resistance to UV radiation than those germinating in the rich nutrient medium, even though there was no discernible difference under the two incubation conditions in respect of the extent of germination and the time at which the outgrowth stage appeared (3 hr). This was due to the formation TT in the DNA of spores germinating in the low nutrient as compared to that of spores germinating in the rich-nutrient medium. In UV-irradiated dormant spores, SPP formed in the spore DNA did not disappear even after prolonged incubation in the non-germinating medium. However, when the UV-irradiated dormant spores were germinated in low or rich nutrient medium, a significant proportion of SPP in DNA was eliminated. The dormant spores incubated in either of the germinating media for 15 min and then UV-irradiated were capable of eliminating SPP (presumably by monomerization) even by incubation in a non-germinating medium and in the complete absence of protein synthesis (buffer holding recovery), thereby implying that spore-repair enzymes were activated in response to initial's germination. The acquisition of photo-reactivation ability appeared in spores subjected to germination only in the rich-nutrient medium at the outgrowth stage and required de novo synthesis of the required enzymes.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of salt (NaCl) on the efficacy of nisin in preventing outgrowth of Bacillus licheniformis spores was determined in Plate Count Agar (PCA). An equivalent liquid medium was used for heat activation. Nisin and salt were added to the heat-activation medium, the PCA, or both. The spores were extremely sensitive to nisin; outgrowth were completely inhibited in salt-free media when 10 iu/ml of nisin was present in both the heat-activation and the growth media or when 100 iu/ml nisin was present in either the heat-activation and the growth medium. In media supplemented with 1% salt, outgrowth occurred from 1% of spores exposed to 100 iu/ml nisin in either the heat-activation or the growth medium. A 3% salt supplement was necessary before detectable outgrowth occurred when both the heat-activation and the growth media contained 100 iu/ml nisin. Salt appears to antagonize the sporicidal action of nisin by interfering with nisin adsorption onto the spore.  相似文献   

18.
Early events during the germination of spores of the fern Onoclea sensibilis were studied to determine the time during germination when ethylene had its greatest inhibiting effect. Water imbibition by dry spores was rapid and did not appear to be inhibited by ethylene. During normal germination DNA synthesis occurred about four hours before the nucleus moved from a central position to the spore periphery. Following nuclear movement, mitosis and cell division occurred, partitioning the spore into a small rhizoid cell and a large protonemal cell. Cell division was complete approximately six hours after nuclear movement. Ethylene treatment of the spores blocked DNA synthesis, nuclear movement, and cell division. The earliest DNA replication in uninhibited spores was observed after 14 hours of germination, and the maximal rate of spore labeling with 3H-thymidine was between 16 and 20 hours. Spores were most sensitive to ethylene, however, during the stages of germination prior to DNA synthesis, and it was concluded that ethylene did not directly inhibit DNA replication but blocked germination at some earlier fundamental step. The effects of ethylene were reversible. since complete recovery from inhibition of germination was possible if ethylene was released and the spores were kept in light. Recovery was much slower in darkness. It was hypothesized that light acted photosynthetically to overcome the ethylene inhibition of germination. Consistent with this, it was shown that spores exhibit net photosynthesis after only two hours of germination.  相似文献   

19.
The lethal effect on different micro-organisms of ultrasonic waves and hydrogen peroxide separately and in combination was examined. Ultrasonic waves were able to disintegrate Fusobacterium nucleatum within 3 min and to kill Veillonella parvula after 15 min and Streptoccus sanguis after 20 min; 20 vols H2O2 (6% w/v) killed V. parvula, Strep. sanguis and Staphylococcus aureus after 5 min treatment, and Clostridium sporogenes spores after 25 min. Sonication of Cl. sporogenes spores, Bacillus cereus spores and Candida albicans in 20 vols H2O2, using an ultrasonic probe, was lethal to the organisms after 15, 10 and 10 min, respectively. The latter 2 organisms were not killed by 30 min exposure to either agent separately. Similar results were obtained when an ultrasonic tank was used for sonication.  相似文献   

20.
1-Methyldodecyldimethylamine oxide (MDDO) and N,N'-bis(dodecyldimethyl)-1,2-ethanediammonium dibromide (BDED) exhibit a significant affinity for the surface of Bacillus cereus spores and adsorb very rapidly to the cells; they have a pronounced inhibitory effect on spore outgrowth. In order to alter the affinity of the spore surface for these inhibitors, the spores were pretreated with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), and with an electronegative (Tween 80) and electropositive (histone) compound. In SDS-pretreated spores the inhibitory effect of MDDO and BDED was abolished to a considerable extent. Whereas the development of intact spores was inhibited already after germination, in SDS-pretreated spores the postgermination development continued but was not completed. In Tween 80-pretreated spores the addition of BDED led only to a retardation of outgrowth and division; BDED added only during the division stage interrupted further development completely. Histone-pretreated spores stopped their development instantaneously after the addition of BDED at any phase of the postgermination development. The possible mechanisms of the interaction of the compounds used with spore surface or rather with the state of its structures are discussed.  相似文献   

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