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1.
Myxococcus xanthus is a Gram-negative deltaproteobacterium that has evolved the ability to differentiate into metabolically quiescent spores that are resistant to heat and desiccation. An essential feature of the differentiation processes is the assembly of a rigid, cell wall-like spore coat on the surface of the outer membrane. In this study, we characterize the spore coat composition and describe the machinery necessary for secretion of spore coat material and its subsequent assembly into a stress-bearing matrix. Chemical analyses of isolated spore coat material indicate that the spore coat consists primarily of short 1–4- and 1–3-linked GalNAc polymers that lack significant glycosidic branching and may be connected by glycine peptides. We show that 1–4-linked glucose (Glc) is likely a minor component of the spore coat with the majority of the Glc arising from contamination with extracellular polysaccharides, O-antigen, or storage compounds. Neither of these structures is required for the formation of resistant spores. Our analyses indicate the GalNAc/Glc polymer and glycine are exported by the ExoA-I system, a Wzy-like polysaccharide synthesis and export machinery. Arrangement of the capsular-like polysaccharides into a rigid spore coat requires the NfsA–H proteins, members of which reside in either the cytoplasmic membrane (NfsD, -E, and -G) or outer membrane (NfsA, -B, and -C). The Nfs proteins function together to modulate the chain length of the surface polysaccharides, which is apparently necessary for their assembly into a stress-bearing matrix.  相似文献   

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3.
The spore coat forms as a rigid extracellular wall around each spore cell during culmination. Coats purified from germinated spores contain multiple protein species and an approximately equal mass of polysaccharide, consisting mostly of cellulose and a galactose/N-acetylgalactosamine polysaccharide (GPS). All but the cellulose are prepackaged during prespore cell differentiation in a regulated secretory compartment, the prespore vesicle. The morphology of this compartment resembles an anastomosing, tubular network rather than a spherical vesicle. The molecules of the prespore vesicles are not uniformly mixed but are segregated into partially overlapping domains. Although lysosomal enzymes have been found in the prespore vesicle, this compartment does not function as a lysosome because it is not acidic, and a common antigen associated with acid hydrolases is found in another, acidic vesicle population. All the prespore vesicle profiles disappear at the time of appearance of their contents outside of the cell; this constitutes an early stage in spore coat formation, which can be detected both by microscopy and flow cytometry. As an electron-dense layer, the future outer layer of the coat, condenses, cellulose can be found and is located immediately beneath this outer layer. Certain proteins and the GPS become associated with either the outer or inner layers surrounding this middle cellulose layer. Assembly of the inner and outer layers occurs in part from a pool of glycoproteins that is shared between spores, and unincorporated molecules loosely reside in the interspore matrix, a location from which they can be easily washed away. When the glycosylation of several major protein species is disrupted by mutation, the coat is assembled, but differences are found in its porosity and the extractibility of certain proteins. In addition, the retention or loss of proteolytic fragments in the mutants indicates regions of spore coat proteins that are required for association with the coat. Comparative examination of the macrocyst demonstrates that patterns of molecular distributions are not conserved between the macrocyst and spore coats. Thus spore coat assembly is characterized by highly specific intermolecular interactions, leading to saturable associations of individual glycoproteins with specific layers and the exclusion of excess copies to the interspore space.  相似文献   

4.
Fine Structure of Bacillus megaterium during Microcycle Sporogenesis   总被引:10,自引:7,他引:3       下载免费PDF全文
Ultrathin sections were prepared from cultures of Bacillus megaterium QM B1551 undergoing microcycle sporogenesis (initial spore to primary cell to second-stage spore without intervening cell division) on a chemically defined medium. The cytoplasmic core of the dormant spore was surrounded by plasma membrane, cell-wall primordium, cortex, outer cortical layer, and spore coats. Early in the cycle, the coat opened at the germinal groove, the cortex swelled, ribosomes and a chromatinic area associated with large mesosomes (which may later be incorporated into the expanding plasma membrane) appeared in the core, and the cell wall became defined at the site of the cell wall primordium. Poly-β-hydroxybutyrate granules began to appear in the primary cell at about 3 hr. By 7 hr, the forespore of the second-stage spore was delineated by typical double membranes. Between 7 and 12 hr, second-stage cell-wall primordium and cortex developed between the separating forespore membranes. The inner membrane became the plasma membrane of the second-stage spore, and the outer membrane eventually disintegrated within the second-stage spore cortex. A densely staining double layer (spore-coat primordium) developed external to the outer forespore membrane. The inner spore coat and the outer cortical layer of the second-stage spore developed from this primordium. The outer part of the spore coat, probably of sporangial origin, was laid down on the external surface of the inner spore coat. By 12 hr, second-stage spores were almost mature. By 20 hr, the mature endospores, with a thickened outer coat, were often still enclosed by degenerate primary cell wall and by the outer cortical layer and spore coat of the initial spore.  相似文献   

5.
The Bacillus subtilis spore coat is a multilayer, proteinaceous structure that consists of more than 50 proteins. Located on the surface of the spore, the coat provides resistance to potentially toxic molecules as well as to predation by the protozoan Tetrahymena thermophila. When coat-defective spores are fed to Tetrahymena, the spores are readily digested. However, a residue termed a "rind" that looks like coat material remains. As observed with a phase-contrast microscope, the rinds are spherical or hemispherical structures that appear to be devoid of internal contents. Atomic force microscopy and chemical analyses showed that (i) the rinds are composed of insoluble protein largely derived from both outer and inner spore coat layers, (ii) the amorphous layer of the outer coat is largely responsible for providing spore resistance to protozoal digestion, and (iii) the rinds and intact spores do not contain significant levels of silicon.  相似文献   

6.
To confirm the presence of the outer spore membrane in dormant spore coats of Bacillus subtilis, the proteins from vegetative cell membrane and dormant spore coat fractions were compared by immunoblot assay with antibodies prepared against both preparations. The spore coat fraction contained at least 11 proteins antigenically identical to those in the vegetative cell membranes. Further, the cytochemical localization of the proteins derived from vegetative cell membrane in dormant spores was examined by an immunoelectron microscopy method with a colloidal gold-immunoglobulin G complex. The colloidal gold particles were observed in the coat region and around the core region of dormant spore. These results have provided evidence that some proteins from vegetative cell membrane remain in the dormant spore coat region of B. subtilis, although it is not clear whether the outer membrane persists as an intact functional entity or not.  相似文献   

7.
Bacillus subtilis FtsY is a homolog of the alpha-subunit of mammalian signal recognition particle (SRP) receptor, and is essential for protein translocation and vegetative cell growth. An FtsY conditional null mutant (strain ISR39) can express ftsY during the vegetative stage but not during spore formation. Spores of ISR39 have the same resistance to heat and chloroform as the wild-type, while their resistance to lysozyme is reduced. Electron microscopy showed that the outer coat of spores was incompletely assembled. The coat protein profile of the ftsY mutant spores was different from that of wild-type spores. The amounts of CotA, and CotE were reduced in spore coat proteins of ftsY mutant spores and the molecular mass of CotB was reduced. In addition, CotA, CotB, and CotE are present in normal form at T(8) of sporulation in ftsY mutant cells. These results suggest that FtsY has a pivotal role in assembling coat proteins onto the coat layer during spore morphogenesis.  相似文献   

8.
The rod-shaped cells of Myxococcus xanthus, a Gram-negative deltaproteobacterium, differentiate to environmentally resistant spores upon starvation or chemical stress. The environmental resistance depends on a spore coat polysaccharide that is synthesised by the ExoA-I proteins, some of which are part of a Wzx/Wzy-dependent pathway for polysaccharide synthesis and export; however, key components of this pathway have remained unidentified. Here, we identify and characterise two additional loci encoding proteins with homology to enzymes involved in polysaccharide synthesis and export, as well as sugar modification and show that six of the proteins encoded by these loci are essential for the formation of environmentally resistant spores. Our data support that MXAN_3260, renamed ExoM and MXAN_3026, renamed ExoJ, are the Wzx flippase and Wzy polymerase, respectively, responsible for translocation and polymerisation of the repeat unit of the spore coat polysaccharide. Moreover, we provide evidence that three glycosyltransferases (MXAN_3027/ExoK, MXAN_3262/ExoO and MXAN_3263/ExoP) and a polysaccharide deacetylase (MXAN_3259/ExoL) are important for formation of the intact spore coat, while ExoE is the polyisoprenyl-phosphate hexose-1-phosphate transferase responsible for initiating repeat unit synthesis, likely by transferring N-acetylgalactosamine-1-P to undecaprenyl-phosphate. Together, our data generate a more complete model of the Exo pathway for spore coat polysaccharide biosynthesis and export.  相似文献   

9.
In some plant species, including Arabidopsis, fertilization induces the epidermal cells of the outer ovule integument to differentiate into a specialized seed coat cell type with a unique morphology and containing large quantities of polysaccharide mucilage (pectin). Such seed coat mucilage cells are necessary for neither viability nor germination under normal laboratory conditions. Thus, the Arabidopsis seed coat offers a unique system with which to use genetics to identify genes controlling cell morphogenesis and complex polysaccharide biosynthesis and secretion. As a first step in the application of this system, we have used microscopy to investigate the structure and differentiation of Arabidopsis seed coat mucilage cells, including cell morphogenesis and the synthesis, secretion, and extrusion of mucilage. During seed coat development in Arabidopsis, the epidermal cells of the outer ovule integument grow and differentiate into cells that produce large quantities of mucilage between the primary cell wall and plasma membrane. Concurrent with mucilage production, the cytoplasm is shaped into a column in the center of the cell. Following mucilage secretion the cytoplasmic column is surrounded by a secondary cell wall to form a structure known as the columella. Thus, differentiation of the seed coat mucilage cells involves a highly regulated series of events including growth, morphogenesis, mucilage biosynthesis and secretion, and secondary cell wall synthesis.  相似文献   

10.
《Experimental mycology》1989,13(2):169-182
Macromolecular components of the spore coat ofDictyostelium discoideum have been localized by gold-labeled affinity cytochemistry. The outer electron-dense layer is the residence of three prominent glycoproteins that express a fucose-dependent epitope, whereas the inner electron-dense layer includes SP85 and the galactose/N-acetylgalactosamine-containing polysaccharide (GPS). The cellulosic layers are interposed between them. The outer-layer glycoproteins and the GPS also can be found in the interspore fluid, which is usually lost during collection of the spores. Assembly of the spore coat, examined over time, showed that all components, except for the cellulose, are found in an internal secretory vesicle population. All components are found in each vesicle but are not uniformly intermixed within them. Cellulose does not appear until after the outer electron-dense layer of the spore coat has been organized following secretion. The GPS is excluded from the outer dense layer and largely from the cellulosic layer, being more concentrated in the inner layer. SP85 remains localized in the inner dense layer near the cell surface with a circumferentially focal distribution. The distinct distributions of these macromolecular species in the mature spore coat are foreshadowed by their mosaic distribution in the prespore vesicles from which they originate.  相似文献   

11.
Electron microscopic observation showed that the spore coat of Bacillus thiaminolyticus consisted of at least four layers; a high electron dense outer spore coat layer with five prominent ridges, a middle spore coat layer including two layers of a high and a low electron density, and an inner spore coat layer composing six to seven laminated layers. Rapid breakdown of the cortex and swelling of the core occurred in spores which were allowed to germinate by L-alanine for 45 min, whereas no change of surface feature was observed by scanning electron microscopy. Germination and outgrowth of spores in nutrient broth proceeded, being accompanied by morphological changes, in three steps; the first is a rapid breakdown of the cortex and swelling of the core, the second degradation of the inner layer at prominent region of the spore coat, and the last rupture of the spore coat and emergence of a young vegetative cell.  相似文献   

12.
Spores of Bacillus subtilis have a thick outer layer of relatively insoluble protein called the coat, which protects spores against a number of treatments and may also play roles in spore germination. However, elucidation of precise roles of the coat in spore properties has been hampered by the inability to prepare spores lacking all or most coat material. In this work, we show that spores of a strain with mutations in both the cotE and gerE genes, which encode proteins involved in coat assembly and expression of genes encoding coat proteins, respectively, lack most extractable coat protein as seen by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, as well as the great majority of the coat as seen by atomic force microscopy. However, the cotE gerE spores did retain a thin layer of insoluble coat material that was most easily seen by microscopy following digestion of these spores with lysozyme. These severely coat-deficient spores germinated relatively normally with nutrients and even better with dodecylamine but not with a 1:1 chelate of Ca(2+) and dipicolinic acid. These spores were also quite resistant to wet heat, to mechanical disruption, and to treatment with detergents at an elevated temperature and pH but were exquisitely sensitive to killing by sodium hypochlorite. These results provide new insight into the role of the coat layer in spore properties.  相似文献   

13.
Electron microscopic observation showed that the spore coat of Bacillus thiaminolyticus consisted of at least four layers; a high electron dense outer spore coat layer with five prominent ridges, a middle spore coat layer including two layers of a high and a low electron density, and an inner spore coat layer composing six to seven laminated layers. Rapid breakdown of the cortex and swelling of the core occurred in spores which were allowed to germinate by L -alanine for 45 min, whereas no change of surface feature was observed by scanning electron microscopy. Germination and outgrowth of spores in nutrient broth proceeded, being accompanied by morphological changes, in three steps; the first is a rapid breakdown of the cortex and swelling of the core, the second degradation of the inner layer at a prominent region of the spore coat, and the last rupture of the spore coat and emergence of a young vegetative cell.  相似文献   

14.
Cell differentiation is widespread during the development of multicellular organisms, but rarely observed in prokaryotes. One example of prokaryotic differentiation is the Gram-negative bacterium Myxococcus xanthus . In response to starvation, this gliding bacterium initiates a complex developmental programme that results in the formation of spore-filled fruiting bodies. How the cells metabolically support the necessary complex cellular differentiation from rod-shaped vegetative cells into spherical spores is unknown. Here, we present evidence that intracellular lipid bodies provide the necessary metabolic fuel for the development of spores. Formed at the onset of starvation, these lipid bodies gradually disappear until they are completely used up by the time the cells have become mature spores. Moreover, it appears that lipid body formation in M. xanthus is an important initial step indicating cell fate during differentiation. Upon starvation, two subpopulations of cells occur: cells that form lipid bodies invariably develop into spores, while cells that do not form lipid bodies end up becoming peripheral rods, which are cells that lack signs of morphological differentiation and stay in a vegetative-like state. These data indicate that lipid bodies not only fuel cellular differentiation but that their formation represents the first known morphological sign indicating cell fate during differentiation.  相似文献   

15.
We describe the application of immunofluorescence microscopy to visualization of the subcellular localization of proteins involved in coat morphogenesis and chromosome packaging during the process of sporulation in Bacillus subtilis . In confirmation and extension of previous findings, we show that SpolVA, which is responsible for guiding coat formation to the surface of the outer membrane that surrounds the developing spore, assembles into a shell that is located close to or on the surface of this enveloping membrane. CotE, which is responsible for the formation of the outer layer of the coat, assembles into a second shell of apparently larger diameter. Assembly of SpolVA could be detected as early as the morphological stage of polar septation and closely followed the enveloping membrane of the mother cell during the stage of engulfment, thereby providing a sensitive and diagnostic marker for this phagocytic-like process. Surprisingly, the chromosome of the developing spore and the small, acid-soluble proteins, known as α/β-type SASPs, that are known to coat the spore chromosome, were found to co-localize to a doughnut-like ring of approximately 1 µm in diameter. The use of a double mutant lacking the α/β-type SASP demonstrated that these high abundance, DNA-binding proteins are responsible for packaging the chromosome of the developing spore into this unusual structure. We conclude that sporulation in B. subtilis is a fertile system for addressing cell biological problems in a bacterium and that immunofluorescence microscopy provides a sensitive method for visualizing protein subcellular localization at high resolution.  相似文献   

16.
Electron microscopy of thin sections of dormant and germinating spores of Bacillus subtilis 168 revealed a progressive change in the structure of the cortex, outer spore coat, and inner spore coat. The initial changes were observed in the cortex region, which showed a loose fibrous network within 10 min of germination, and in the outer spore coat, which began to be sloughed off. The permeability of the complex outer spore layers was modified within 10 min, since, at this time, the internal structures of the spore coat were readily stainable. A nicking degradation action of the laminated inner spore coat began at 20 min, and this progressed for the next 20 min leading to the loosening of the inner spore coat. By 30 min, the outer spore coat showed signs of disintegration, and at 40 min, both the outer and inner spore coats were degraded extensively. At 30 to 40 min, a period just preceding net deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis, mesosomes became very prominent in the inner spore core and the cell wall began to thicken around the spore core. At 50 min, an emerging cell was observed, and by 60 min, there was clear evidence for elongation of the emerging cell and the presence of two nuclear bodies. At 90 min, elongation had been followed by the first cell division. There was evidence for spore coat fragments at the opposite poles of the dividing cell.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
19.
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   

20.
There is a marked increase in the half-cystine content of bacterial spores, especially the coat layers at the time of formation of the outer coat. When a cysteine auxotroph of Bacillus cereus T is grown on limiting cysteine, the spores contain the normal content of half-cystine, suggesting an alternate source. Glutathione appears to be such a supply of cysteine since it is hydrolyzed during sporulation and there are increased activities of the hydrolyzing enzymes at the same time. In addition, a cysteine auxotroph with a second alteration, a temperature-sensitive glutathione disulfide reductase, produces lysozyme-sensitive spores at 40 C. These spores appear to be defective in the formation of outer spore coat. During sporulation at 40 C, the double mutant accumulates oxidized glutathione which is a poor substrate for the hydrolytic enzymes. As a result, sporulating cells are deficient in half-cystines which are essential for outer spore coat morphogenesis. This alteration can be overcome by a shift to 30 C or by addition of cystinyl-pencillamine or cysteinyl-glycine to cultures sporulating at 40 C.  相似文献   

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