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1.
Cultures of Bacillus subtilis were treated during sporulation with antibiotics (bacitracin and vancomycin) that affect peptidoglycan synthesis. The cells were resistant to the effects of the antibiotics only when the drugs were added about 2 h after the beginning of sporulation. This was about 1 h later than the escape time of a temperature-sensitive sporulation mutant that is unable to complete prespore septation. Similar experiments were done with a mutant temperature sensitive for peptidoglycan synthesis. This showed an escape curve similar to that shown by the antibiotics. When sporulating cells were treated with antibiotics, they produced alkaline phosphatase earlier than normal. Enzyme production was unaffected by inhibition of deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis but was inhibited by chloramphenicol. Sporulation mutants that are unable to make alkaline phosphatase under normal conditions were able to make it in the presence of bacitracin. The alkaline phosphatase made under these conditions was under "sporulation-type" control since its synthesis was repressible by casein hydrolysate and unaffected by inorganic phosphate. When cells were treated with bacitracin in the growth medium as well as in the sporulation medium, alkaline phosphatase synthesis was at the same level as in an untreated control. A number of other antibiotics and surfactants were tested for the ability to cause premature production of the phosphatase of those tested, only taurodeoxycholate whowed this behavior. Moreover, incubation of cells with taurodeoxycholate in the growth medium as well as in the sporulation medium prevented premature enzyme production.  相似文献   

2.
Bacterial spore heat resistance is primarily dependent upon dehydration of the spore cytoplasm, a state that is maintained by the spore peptidoglycan wall, the spore cortex. A peptidoglycan structural modification found uniquely in spores is the formation of muramic delta-lactam. Production of muramic delta-lactam in Bacillus subtilis requires removal of a peptide side chain from the N-acetylmuramic acid residue by a cwlD-encoded muramoyl-L-Alanine amidase. Expression of cwlD takes place in both the mother cell and forespore compartments of sporulating cells, though expression is expected to be required only in the mother cell, from which cortex synthesis derives. Expression of cwlD in the forespore is in a bicistronic message with the upstream gene ybaK. We show that ybaK plays no apparent role in spore peptidoglycan synthesis and that expression of cwlD in the forespore plays no significant role in spore peptidoglycan formation. Peptide cleavage by CwlD is apparently followed by deacetylation of muramic acid and lactam ring formation. The product of pdaA (yfjS), which encodes a putative deacetylase, has recently been shown to also be required for muramic delta-lactam formation. Expression of CwlD in Escherichia coli results in muramoyl L-Alanine amidase activity but no muramic delta-lactam formation. Expression of PdaA alone in E. coli had no effect on E. coli peptidoglycan structure, whereas expression of CwlD and PdaA together resulted in the formation of muramic delta-lactam. CwlD and PdaA are necessary and sufficient for muramic delta-lactam production, and no other B. subtilis gene product is required. PdaA probably carries out both deacetylation and lactam ring formation and requires the product of CwlD activity as a substrate.  相似文献   

3.
The structure of the endospore cell wall peptidoglycan of Bacillus subtilis has been examined. Spore peptidoglycan was produced by the development of a method based on chemical permeabilization of the spore coats and enzymatic hydrolysis of the peptidoglycan. The resulting muropeptides which were >97% pure were analyzed by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography, amino acid analysis, and mass spectrometry. This revealed that 49% of the muramic acid residues in the glycan backbone were present in the delta-lactam form which occurred predominantly every second muramic acid. The glycosidic bonds adjacent to the muramic acid delta-lactam residues were resistant to the action of muramidases. Of the muramic acid residues, 25.7 and 23.3% were substituted with a tetrapeptide and a single L-alanine, respectively. Only 2% of the muramic acids had tripeptide side chains and may constitute the primordial cell wall, the remainder of the peptidoglycan being spore cortex. The spore peptidoglycan is very loosely cross-linked at only 2.9% of the muramic acid residues, a figure approximately 11-fold less than that of the vegetative cell wall. The peptidoglycan from strain AA110 (dacB) had fivefold-greater cross-linking (14.4%) than the wild type and an altered ratio of muramic acid substituents having 37.0, 46.3, and 12.3% delta-lactam, tetrapeptide, and single L-alanine, respectively. This suggests a role for the DacB protein (penicillin-binding protein 5*) in cortex biosynthesis. The sporulation-specific putative peptidoglycan hydrolase CwlD plays a pivotal role in the establishment of the mature spore cortex structure since strain AA107 (cwlD) has spore peptidoglycan which is completely devoid of muramic acid delta-lactam residues. Despite this drastic change in peptidoglycan structure, the spores are still stable but are unable to germinate. The role of delta-lactam and other spore peptidoglycan structural features in the maintenance of dormancy, heat resistance, and germination is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
While vegetative Bacillus subtilis cells and mature spores are both surrounded by a thick layer of peptidoglycan (PG, a polymer of glycan strands cross‐linked by peptide bridges), it has remained unclear whether PG surrounds prespores during engulfment. To clarify this issue, we generated a slender ΔponA mutant that enabled high‐resolution electron cryotomographic imaging. Three‐dimensional reconstructions of whole cells in near‐native states revealed a thin PG‐like layer extending from the lateral cell wall around the prespore throughout engulfment. Cryotomography of purified sacculi and fluorescent labelling of PG in live cells confirmed that PG surrounds the prespore. The presence of PG throughout engulfment suggests new roles for PG in sporulation, including a new model for how PG synthesis might drive engulfment, and obviates the need to synthesize a PG layer de novo during cortex formation. In addition, it reveals that B. subtilis can synthesize thin, Gram‐negative‐like PG layers as well as its thick, archetypal Gram‐positive cell wall. The continuous transformations from thick to thin and back to thick during sporulation suggest that both forms of PG have the same basic architecture (circumferential). Endopeptidase activity may be the main switch that governs whether a thin or a thick PG layer is assembled.  相似文献   

5.
Conditions for zymographic detection of a 41-kDa spore cortex hydrolysis-specific autolysin, A6, from Bacillus subtilis 168 were optimised. A6 was present during sporulation from stages II–IV and remained active in the dormant spore. Its expression was controlled by the mother cell-specific early-sporulation sigma factor σE. The characteristic muramic acid δ-lactam of spore cortical peptidoglycan was not necessary for cortex hydrolysis by A6, but it may be important in the inability of the major vegetative autolysin LytC to digest wild-type cortex. Two other minor autolysins were also observed during sporulation. The possible physiological significance of these observations is discussed.  相似文献   

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7.
Density gradient centrifugation was used to monitor DNA replication during sporulation of a 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine-tolerant, thymidine-requiring strain of Bacillus subtilis. DNA of heavy, intermediate, and light density was found in cells induced to sporulate in the presence of bromodeoxyuridine, but only intermediate DNA was detected in mature spores. Cells grown with bromodeoxyuridine until DNA was in the heavy form formed spores containing intermediate and light DNA when sporulated with thymidine alone.  相似文献   

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10.
Chromosome strand segregation during sporulation in Bacillus subtilis   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
After the initiation of spore formation in Bacillus subtilis, the products of the final round of DNA replication segregate into two cells, i.e. the prespore and the mother cell. The prespore, which is known to contain a single completed chromosome, develops into a mature endospore which can be readily separated from mother cells and non-sporulating cells on the basis of its resistance properties. We have used a procedure originally developed to label the terminus region of the B. subtilis chromosome to specifically label the newly synthesized strands of DNA during the final round of DNA replication before sporulation. We have purified prespore DNA and used strand-specific probes to measure the radioactivity incorporated. The results show that the sister chromosomes segregate at random into the prespore. This result has implications for the segregation of chromosomes during vegetative growth and for the generation of cellular asymmetry during sporulation.  相似文献   

11.
The first ~10% of spores released from sporangia (early spores) during Bacillus subtilis sporulation were isolated, and their properties were compared to those of the total spores produced from the same culture. The early spores had significantly lower resistance to wet heat and hypochlorite than the total spores but identical resistance to dry heat and UV radiation. Early and total spores also had the same levels of core water, dipicolinic acid, and Ca and germinated similarly with several nutrient germinants. The wet heat resistance of the early spores could be increased to that of total spores if early spores were incubated in conditioned sporulation medium for ~24 h at 37°C (maturation), and some hypochlorite resistance was also restored. The maturation of early spores took place in pH 8 buffer with Ca(2+) but was blocked by EDTA; maturation was also seen with early spores of strains lacking the CotE protein or the coat-associated transglutaminase, both of which are needed for normal coat structure. Nonetheless, it appears to be most likely that it is changes in coat structure that are responsible for the increased resistance to wet heat and hypochlorite upon early spore maturation.  相似文献   

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The change of motility and the presence of flagella were followed throughout growth and sporulation in a standard sporulating strain and in 19 cacogenic sporulation mutants of Bacillus subtilis. For the standard strain, the fraction of motile cells decreased during the developmental period to less than 10% at T4. Motility was lost well before the cells lose their flagella. Conditions reducing the decrease of motility also reduced sporulation: motile cells never contained spores. The decrease of motility was not coupled with a decrease in the cellular concentration of adenosine 5'-triphosphate or a decline in oxygen consumption, but an uncoupling agent immediately destroyed motility at any time. Apparently, motility decreased during development because it became increasingly uncoupled from the energy generating systems of the cell. The motility of sporulation mutants decreased after the end of growth at the same time as or earlier than the motility of the standard strain; the early decrease of motility in an aconitase mutant, but not that in an alpha-ketoglurate dehydrogenase mutant, could be avoided by addition of L-glutamate. Sporulation or related events such as extracellular antibiotic or protease production were not needed for the motility decline.  相似文献   

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The penicillin-binding proteins (PBPs) of Bacillus subtilis were examined in samples collected at various times from sporulating cultures and compared with the PBPs in a presporulation sample. Large increases in vegetative PBPs 2B and 3 and the appearance of at least one new PBP (42,000 daltons) occurred at reproducible times during sporulation. In some strains a second new PBP (60,000 daltons) was also produced. By comparing the PBP activities in sporulating cells and two spo0 mutants we have classified these changes as sporulation-related events rather than the consequences of stationary-phase aging. The other vegetative PBPs (PBPs 1, 2A, 4, and 5) decreased during sporulation, but not in sufficient amount or at the appropriate time to account for the appearance of the new proteins. A possible connection between specific PBP changes and the penicillin-sensitive stages of sporulation is suggested.  相似文献   

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Heat-shock proteins during growth and sporulation of Bacillus subtilis   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
Four major heat-shock proteins (hsps) with apparent molecular masses of 84, 69, 32 and 22 kDa were detected in exponentially growing stationary phase and sporulating cells of Bacillus subtilis heat-shocked from 30 to 43 degrees C. The most abundant, hsp69, is probably analogous to the E. coli groEL protein. These proteins were transiently inducible by heat-shock. Partial purification of RNA polymerase revealed several other minor hsps. One of these, a 48 kDa polypeptide probably corresponds to sigma 43. The synthesis of this polypeptide and at least two other proteins appeared to be under sporulation and heat-shock regulation and was affected by the SpoOA mutation.  相似文献   

19.
Control of sigma factor activity during Bacillus subtilis sporulation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
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20.
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