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1.
Bacterial endospores exhibit extreme resistance to most conditions that rapidly kill other life forms, remaining viable in this dormant state for centuries or longer. While the majority of Bacillus subtilis dormant spores germinate rapidly in response to nutrient germinants, a small subpopulation termed superdormant spores are resistant to germination, potentially evading antibiotic and/or decontamination strategies. In an effort to better understand the underlying mechanisms of superdormancy, membrane-associated proteins were isolated from populations of B. subtilis dormant, superdormant, and germinated spores, and the relative abundance of 11 germination-related proteins was determined using multiple-reaction-monitoring liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry assays. GerAC, GerKC, and GerD were significantly less abundant in the membrane fractions obtained from superdormant spores than those derived from dormant spores. The amounts of YpeB, GerD, PrkC, GerAC, and GerKC recovered in membrane fractions decreased significantly during germination. Lipoproteins, as a protein class, decreased during spore germination, while YpeB appeared to be specifically degraded. Some protein abundance differences between membrane fractions of dormant and superdormant spores resemble protein changes that take place during germination, suggesting that the superdormant spore isolation procedure may have resulted in early, non-committal germination-associated changes. In addition to low levels of germinant receptor proteins, a deficiency in the GerD lipoprotein may contribute to heterogeneity of spore germination rates. Understanding the reasons for superdormancy may allow for better spore decontamination procedures.  相似文献   

2.
Purified superdormant spores of Bacillus cereus, B. megaterium, and B. subtilis isolated after optimal heat activation of dormant spores and subsequent germination with inosine, d-glucose, or l-valine, respectively, germinate very poorly with the original germinants used to remove dormant spores from spore populations, thus allowing isolation of the superdormant spores, and even with alternate germinants. However, these superdormant spores exhibited significant germination with the original or alternate germinants if the spores were heat activated at temperatures 8 to 15°C higher than the optimal temperatures for the original dormant spores, although the levels of superdormant spore germination were not as great as those of dormant spores. Use of mixtures of original and alternate germinants lowered the heat activation temperature optima for both dormant and superdormant spores. The superdormant spores had higher wet-heat resistance and lower core water content than the original dormant spore populations, and the environment of dipicolinic acid in the core of superdormant spores as determined by Raman spectroscopy of individual spores differed from that in dormant spores. These results provide new information about the germination, heat activation optima, and wet-heat resistance of superdormant spores and the heterogeneity in these properties between individual members of dormant spore populations.Spores of Bacillus species are formed in sporulation and are metabolically dormant and extremely resistant to a variety of stress factors (31, 32). While spores can remain dormant for long periods, if given the proper stimulus, they can rapidly “return to life” in the process of spore germination followed by outgrowth (30). Since spores are generally present in significant amounts on many foodstuffs and growing cells of a number of Bacillus species are significant agents of food spoilage and food-borne disease (32), there is continued applied interest in spore resistance and germination. While dormant spores can be killed by a treatment such as wet heat, this requires high temperatures that are costly and detrimental to food quality. Consequently, there has long been interest in triggering spore germination in foodstuffs, since germinated spores have lost the extreme resistance of dormant spores and are relatively easy to kill. However, this strategy has been difficult to apply because of the significant heterogeneity in germination rates between individual spores in populations. One reflection of this heterogeneity is the extremely variable lag times following addition of germinants but prior to initiation of germination events; while these lag times can vary from 10 to 30 min for most spores in populations, some spores have lag times of many hours or even many days (2, 12, 13, 15, 25). The spores that are extremely slow to germinate have been termed superdormant spores, and populations of superdormant spores have recently been isolated from three Bacillus species, and their germination properties characterized (9, 10). These superdormant spores germinate extremely poorly with the original germinants used to remove dormant spores from spore populations, thus allowing superdormant spore isolation, and also poorly with a number of other germinants, in particular, germinants that target nutrient germinant receptors different than those activated to isolate the superdormant spores. However, the superdormant spores germinate reasonably well with mixtures of nutrient germinants that target multiple germinant receptors. All reasons for spore superdormancy are not known, but one contributing factor is the number of nutrient germinant receptors in the spore''s inner membrane that trigger spore germination by binding to nutrient germinants (9). The levels of these receptors are most likely in the tens of molecules per spore (24), and thus stochastic variation in receptor numbers might result in some spores with such low receptor numbers that these spores germinate very poorly (23). Indeed, 20- to 200-fold elevated levels of at least one nutrient germinant receptor greatly decreases yields of superdormant spores of Bacillus subtilis (9).Spores of Bacillus species generally exhibit a requirement for an activation step in order to exhibit maximum germination (17). Usually this activation is a sublethal heat treatment that for a spore population exhibits an optimum of 60 to 100°C depending on the species. Spores are also extremely resistant to wet heat, generally requiring temperatures of 80 to 110°C to achieve rapid spore killing, with the major factor influencing the wet-heat resistance of spores of mesophilic strains being the spore core''s water content, which can be as low as 30% of wet weight as water in a fully hydrated spore (8, 19, 27, 28, 31). Invariably, increases in core water content are associated with a decrease in spore wet-heat resistance (8, 19, 22, 25). While spore populations most often exhibit log-linear kinetics of wet-heat killing, the observation of tailing in such killing curves at high levels of killing is not uncommon, suggesting there is significant heterogeneity in the wet-heat resistances of individual spores in populations (27, 28). While there has been no comparable work suggesting that there is also heterogeneity in the temperature optima for heat activation of individual spores in populations, this certainly seems possible and indeed was suggested as one cause of spore superdormancy, as yields of superdormant spores from spore populations that are not heat activated are much higher (9, 10). Consequently, the current work was initiated to test the hypothesis that superdormant spores require heat activation temperatures that are higher than those of the original dormant spores. Once this was found to be the case, the wet-heat resistance and core water content of the superdormant and original dormant spores were compared, and the environment of the spore core''s major small molecule, pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylic acid (dipicolinic acid [DPA]) was assessed by Raman spectroscopy of individual spores.  相似文献   

3.
4.
Aim: To analyse the dynamic germination of hundreds of individual superdormant (SD) Bacillus subtilis spores. Methods and Results: Germination of hundreds of individual SD B. subtilis spores with various germinants and under different conditions was followed by multifocus Raman microspectroscopy and differential interference contrast microscopy for 12 h and with temporal resolutions of ≤30 s. SD spores germinated poorly with the nutrient germinant used to isolate them and with alternate germinants targeting the germinant receptor (GR) used originally. The mean times following mixing of spores and nutrient germinants to initiate and complete fast release of Ca‐dipicolinic acid (CaDPA) (Tlag and Trelease times, respectively) of SD spores were much longer than those of dormant spores. However, the ΔTrelease times (Trelease?Tlag) of SD spores were essentially identical to those of dormant spores. SD spores germinated almost as well as dormant spores with nutrient germinants targeting GRs different from the one used to isolate the SD spores and with CaDPA that does not trigger spore germination via GRs. Conclusions: Since (i) ΔTrelease times were essentially identical in GR‐dependent germination of SD and dormant spores; (ii) rates of GR‐independent germination of SD and dormant spores were identical; (iii) large increases in Tlag times were the major difference in the GR‐dependent germination of SD as compared with spores; and (iv) higher GR levels are correlated with shorter Tlag times, these results are consistent with the hypothesis that low levels of a GR are the major reason that some spores in a population are SD with germinants targeting this same GR. Significance and Impact of the Study: This study provides information on the dynamic germination of individual SD spores and improves the understanding of spore superdormancy.  相似文献   

5.
Superdormant spores of Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus megaterium were isolated in 4 to 12% yields following germination with high nutrient levels that activated one or two germinant receptors. These superdormant spores did not germinate with the initial nutrients or those that stimulated other germinant receptors, and the superdormant spores'' defect was not genetic. The superdormant spores did, however, germinate with Ca2+-dipicolinic acid or dodecylamine. Although these superdormant spores did not germinate with high levels of nutrients that activated one or two nutrient germinant receptors, they germinated with nutrient mixtures that activated more receptors, and using high levels of nutrient mixtures activating more germinant receptors decreased superdormant spore yields. The use of moderate nutrient levels to isolate superdormant spores increased their yields; the resultant spores germinated poorly with the initial moderate nutrient concentrations, but they germinated well with high nutrient concentrations. These findings suggest that the levels of superdormant spores in populations depend on the germination conditions used, with fewer superdormant spores isolated when better germination conditions are used. These findings further suggest that superdormant spores require an increased signal for triggering spore germination compared to most spores in populations. One factor determining whether a spore is superdormant is its level of germinant receptors, since spore populations with higher levels of germinant receptors yielded lower levels of superdormant spores. A second important factor may be heat activation of spore populations, since yields of superdormant spores from non-heat-activated spore populations were higher than those from optimally activated spores.Spores of various Bacillus species are formed in sporulation and are metabolically dormant and very resistant to environmental stress factors (21, 37). While such spores can remain in this dormant, resistant state for long periods, they can return to life rapidly through the process of germination, during which the spore''s dormancy and extreme resistance are lost (36). Spore germination has long been of intrinsic interest, and continues to attract applied interest, because (i) spores of a number of Bacillus species are major agents of food spoilage and food-borne disease and (ii) spores of Bacillus anthracis are a major bioterrorism agent. Since spores are much easier to kill after they have germinated, it would be advantageous to trigger germination of spores in foods or the environment and then readily inactivate the much less resistant germinated spores. However, this simple strategy has been largely nullified because germination of spore populations is heterogeneous, with some spores, often called superdormant spores, germinating extremely slowly and potentially coming back to life long after treatments are applied to inactivate germinated spores (8, 9, 16). The concern over superdormant spores in populations also affects decisions such as how long individuals exposed to B. anthracis spores should continue to take antibiotics, since spores could remain dormant in an individual for long periods and then germinate and cause disease (3, 11).In many species, spore germination can be increased by a prior activation step, generally a sublethal heat treatment, although the changes taking place during heat activation are not known (16). Spore germination in Bacillus species is normally triggered by nutrients such as glucose, amino acids, or purine ribosides (27, 36). These agents bind to germinant receptors located in the spore''s inner membrane that are specific for particular nutrients. In Bacillus subtilis, the GerA receptor responds to l-alanine or l-valine, while the GerB and GerK receptors act cooperatively to respond to a mixture of l-asparagine (or l-alanine), d-glucose, d-fructose and K+ ions (AGFK [or Ala-GFK]) (1, 27, 36). There are even more functional germinant receptors in Bacillus megaterium spores, and these respond to d-glucose, l-proline, l-leucine, l-valine, or even salts, such as KBr (6). Glucose appears to trigger germination of B. megaterium spores through either of two germinant receptors, GerU or GerVB, while l-proline triggers germination through only the GerVB receptor, and KBr germination is greatly decreased by the loss of either GerU or GerVB (6). Nutrient binding to the germinant receptors triggers the release of small molecules from the spore core, most notably the huge depot (∼10% of spore dry weight) of pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylic acid (dipicolinic acid [DPA]) present in spores predominantly as a 1:1 diluted chelate with Ca2+ (Ca-DPA) (35, 36). Ca-DPA release then triggers the activation of one of two redundant cortex lytic enzymes (CLEs) that degrade the spore''s peptidoglycan cortex, and cortex degradation completes spore germination and allows progression into outgrowth and then vegetative growth (27, 33, 36).Spore germination can also be triggered by nonnutrient agents, including Ca-DPA and cationic surfactants (27, 33, 36). With B. subtilis spores, Ca-DPA triggers germination by activating one particular CLE, termed CwlJ, and bypasses the spore''s germinant receptors. Germination by the cationic surfactant dodecylamine also bypasses the germinant receptors, and this agent appears to release small molecules including Ca-DPA from the spore core either by opening a normal channel in the spore''s inner membrane for Ca-DPA and other small molecules or by creating such a channel (31, 38, 39).Almost all work on the specifics of the germination of spores of Bacillus species has focused on the majority of spores in populations, and little detailed attention has been paid to that minority of spores that either fail to germinate or germinate extremely slowly. However, it is these latter spores that are most important in unraveling the cause of superdormancy and perhaps suggesting a means to germinate and thus easily inactivate such superdormant spores. Consequently, we have undertaken the task of isolating superdormant spores from spore populations, using buoyant density centrifugation to separate dormant spores from germinated spores. The properties of these purified superdormant spores were then studied, and this information has suggested some reason(s) for spore superdormancy.  相似文献   

6.
Spores of Bacillus species can remain dormant and resistant for years, but can rapidly ‘come back to life’ in germination triggered by agents, such as specific nutrients, and non‐nutrients, such as CaDPA, dodecylamine and hydrostatic pressure. Major events in germination include release of spore core monovalent cations and CaDPA, hydrolysis of the spore cortex peptidoglycan (PG) and expansion of the spore core. This leads to a well‐hydrated spore protoplast in which metabolism and macromolecular synthesis begin. Proteins essential for germination include the GerP proteins that facilitate germinant access to spores' inner layers, germinant receptors (GRs) that recognize and respond to nutrient germinants, GerD important in rapid GR‐dependent germination, SpoVA proteins important in CaDPA release and cortex‐lytic enzymes that degrade cortex PG. Rates of germination of individuals in spore populations are heterogeneous, and methods have been developed recently to simultaneously analyse the germination of multiple individual spores. Spore germination heterogeneity is due primarily to large variations in GR levels among individual spores, with spores that germinate extremely slowly and termed superdormant having very low GR levels. These and other aspects of spore germination will be discussed in this review, and major unanswered questions will also be discussed.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
Dormant Bacillus subtilis spores germinate in the presence of particular nutrients called germinants. The spores are thought to recognize germinants through receptor proteins encoded by the gerA family of operons, which includes gerA, gerB, and gerK. We sought to substantiate this putative function of the GerA family proteins by characterizing spore germination in a mutant strain that contained deletions at all known gerA-like loci. As expected, the mutant spores germinated very poorly in a variety of rich media. In contrast, they germinated like wild-type spores in a chemical germinant, a 1-1 chelate of Ca(2+) and dipicolinic acid (DPA). These observations showed that proteins encoded by gerA family members are required for nutrient-induced germination but not for chemical-triggered germination, supporting the hypothesis that the GerA family encodes receptors for nutrient germinants. Further characterization of Ca(2+)-DPA-induced germination showed that the effect of Ca(2+)-DPA on spore germination was saturated at 60 mM and had a K(m) of 30 mM. We also found that decoating spores abolished their ability to germinate in Ca(2+)-DPA but not in nutrient germinants, indicating that Ca(2+)-DPA and nutrient germinants probably act through parallel arms of the germination pathway.  相似文献   

9.
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   

10.
Superdormant spores of Bacillus cereus and Bacillus subtilis germinated just as well as dormant spores with pressures of 150 or 500 MPa and with or without heat activation. Superdormant B. subtilis spores also germinated as well as dormant spores with peptidoglycan fragments or bryostatin, a Ser/Thr protein kinase activator.Spores of Bacillus species are formed in sporulation, a process that is generally triggered by starvation for one or more nutrients (13, 19). These spores are metabolically dormant and extremely resistant to a large variety of environmental stresses, including heat, radiation, and toxic chemicals, and as a consequence of these properties, these spores can remain viable in their dormant state for many years (13, 18, 19). However, spores are constantly sensing their environment, and if nutrients return, the spores can rapidly return to growth through the process of spore germination (17). Spore germination is generally triggered by specific nutrients that bind to nutrient germinant receptors, with this binding alone somehow triggering germination. However, spore germination can also be triggered by many non-nutrient agents, including cationic surfactants such as dodecylamine, a 1:1 complex of Ca2+ with pyridine-2,6-dicarboxylic acid (dipicolinic acid [DPA], a major spore small molecule), very high pressures, specific peptidoglycan fragments, and bryostatin, an activator of Ser/Thr protein kinases (17, 19, 20). For nutrient germinants in particular, spore germination is also potentiated by a prior sublethal heat treatment termed heat activation (17).While normally the great majority of spores in populations germinate relatively rapidly in response to nutrient germinants, a small percentage of spores germinate extremely slowly. These spores that are refractory to nutrient germination have been termed superdormant spores and are a major concern for the food industry (8). Recently superdormant spores of three Bacillus species have been isolated by repeated germination of spore populations with specific nutrient germinants and isolation of remaining dormant spores (5, 6). These superdormant spores germinate extremely poorly with the nutrient germinants used in superdormant spore isolation, as well as with other nutrient germinants. All of the specific defects leading to spore superdormancy are not known, although an increased level of receptors for specific nutrient germinants decreases levels of superdormant spores obtained with the nutrients that are ligands for these receptors (5). Superdormant spores also have significantly higher temperature optima for heat activation of nutrient germination than the spore population as a whole (7).In contrast to the poor germination of superdormant spores with nutrient germinants, superdormant spores germinate normally with dodecylamine and Ca-DPA (5, 6). This is consistent with possible roles of nutrient germinant receptor levels and/or heat activation temperature optima in affecting spore superdormancy, since neither dodecylamine nor Ca-DPA triggers Bacillus spore germination through nutrient germinant receptors, and germination with these agents is also not stimulated by heat activation (11, 15, 17). However, the effects of high pressures, peptidoglycan fragments, and bryostatin, all of which almost certainly trigger spore germination by mechanisms at least somewhat different than triggering of germination by nutrients, dodecylamine, and Ca-DPA (2, 3, 11, 15, 20, 22, 23), have not been tested for their effects on superdormant spores. Consequently, we have compared the germination of dormant and superdormant spores of two Bacillus species by high-pressures, peptidoglycan fragments, and bryostatin.The spores used in this work were from Bacillus subtilis PS533 (16), a derivative of strain 168 that also carries plasmid pUB110, providing resistance to kanamycin (10 μg/ml), and Bacillus cereus T (originally obtained from H. O. Halvorson). Spores of these strains were prepared and purified as described previously (6, 10, 12). Superdormant spores of B. subtilis were prepared by germination following heat activation at 75°C for 30 min by two germination treatments at 37°C with 10 mM l-valine for 2 h, followed by isolation of remaining dormant spores, all as described previously (5, 10, 12). These superdormant spores germinated extremely poorly with 10 mM valine at 37°C, giving ≤10% germination in 2 h at 37°C, while the initial spore population exhibited >95% germination under the same conditions (data not shown). Superdormant B. cereus spores were isolated similarly, although heat activation was at 65°C for 30 min and the germinant was 5 mM inosine as described previously (6). These superdormant B. cereus spores exhibited <5% germination with inosine in 2 h at 37°C compared to the >95% germination of the initial dormant spores under the same conditions (data not shown).  相似文献   

11.
Spore germination is the first step to Bacillus anthracis pathogenicity. Previous work has shown that B. anthracis spores use germination (Ger) receptors to recognize amino acids and nucleosides as germinants. Genetic analysis has putatively paired each individual Ger receptor with a specific germinant. However, Ger receptors seem to be able to partially compensate for each other and recognize alternative germinants. Using kinetic analysis of B. anthracis spores germinated with inosine and L-alanine, we previously determined kinetic parameters for this germination process and showed binding synergy between the cogerminants. In this work, we expanded our kinetic analysis to determine kinetic parameters and binding order for every B. anthracis spore germinant pair. Our results show that germinant binding can exhibit positive, neutral, or negative cooperativity. Furthermore, different germinants can bind spores by either a random or an ordered mechanism. Finally, simultaneous triggering of multiple germination pathways shows that germinants can either cooperate or interfere with each other during the spore germination process. We postulate that the complexity of germination responses may allow B. anthracis spores to respond to different environments by activating different germination pathways.  相似文献   

12.
Aims: To determine yields, germination and stability of superdormant Bacillus cereus spores. Methods and Results: Superdormant B. cereus spores were isolated by germination with high concentrations of inosine or l ‐alanine in 2–5% yield and did not germinate with high concentrations of either of these germinants, but germinated like starting spores with Ca‐DPA, dodecylamine, l ‐alanine plus inosine or concentrated complete medium. Yields of superdormant spores from germinations with low inosine concentrations were higher, and these spores germinated poorly with low inosine, but relatively normally with high inosine. Yields of superdormant spores were also higher when nonheat‐activated spores were germinated. Superdormant spores stored at 4°C slowly recovered some germination capacity, but recovery was slowed significantly at ?20°C and ?80°C. Conclusions: Factors that influence levels of superdormant B. cereus spores and the properties of such spores are similar to those in B. megaterium and B. subtilis, suggesting there are common mechanisms involved in superdormancy of Bacillus spores. Significance: Superdormant spores are a major concern in the food industry, because the presence of such spores precludes decontamination strategies based on triggering spore germination followed by mild killing treatments. Studies of the properties of superdormant spores may suggest ways to eliminate them.  相似文献   

13.
Clostridium perfringens food poisoning is caused by type A isolates carrying a chromosomal enterotoxin (cpe) gene (C-cpe), while C. perfringens-associated non-food-borne gastrointestinal (GI) diseases are caused by isolates carrying a plasmid-borne cpe gene (P-cpe). C. perfringens spores are thought to be the important infectious cell morphotype, and after inoculation into a suitable host, these spores must germinate and return to active growth to cause GI disease. We have found differences in the germination of spores of C-cpe and P-cpe isolates in that (i) while a mixture of L-asparagine and KCl was a good germinant for spores of C-cpe and P-cpe isolates, KCl and, to a lesser extent, L-asparagine triggered spore germination in C-cpe isolates only; and (ii) L-alanine or L-valine induced significant germination of spores of P-cpe but not C-cpe isolates. Spores of a gerK mutant of a C-cpe isolate in which two of the proteins of a spore nutrient germinant receptor were absent germinated slower than wild-type spores with KCl, did not germinate with L-asparagine, and germinated poorly compared to wild-type spores with the nonnutrient germinants dodecylamine and a 1:1 chelate of Ca2+ and dipicolinic acid. In contrast, spores of a gerAA mutant of a C-cpe isolate that lacked another component of a nutrient germinant receptor germinated at the same rate as that of wild-type spores with high concentrations of KCl, although they germinated slightly slower with a lower KCl concentration, suggesting an auxiliary role for GerAA in C. perfringens spore germination. In sum, this study identified nutrient germinants for spores of both C-cpe and P-cpe isolates of C. perfringens and provided evidence that proteins encoded by the gerK operon are required for both nutrient-induced and non-nutrient-induced spore germination.  相似文献   

14.
Germination of spores of Bacillus subtilis with dodecylamine   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
AIMS: To determine the properties of Bacillus subtilis spores germinated with the alkylamine dodecylamine, and the mechanism of dodecylamine-induced spore germination. METHODS AND RESULTS: Spores of B. subtilis prepared in liquid medium were germinated efficiently by dodecylamine, while spores prepared on solid medium germinated more poorly with this agent. Dodecylamine germination of spores was accompanied by release of almost all spore dipicolinic acid (DPA), degradation of the spore's peptidoglycan cortex, release of the spore's pool of free adenine nucleotides and the killing of the spores. The dodecylamine-germinated spores did not initiate metabolism, did not degrade their pool of small, acid-soluble spore proteins efficiently and had a significantly lower level of core water than did spores germinated by nutrients. As measured by DPA release, dodecylamine readily induced germination of B. subtilis spores that: (a) were decoated, (b) lacked all the receptors for nutrient germinants, (c) lacked both the lytic enzymes either of which is essential for cortex degradation, or (d) had a cortex that could not be attacked by the spore's cortex-lytic enzymes. The DNA in dodecylamine-germinated wild-type spores was readily stained, while the DNA in dodecylamine-germinated spores of strains that were incapable of spore cortex degradation was not. These latter germinated spores also did not release their pool of free adenine nucleotides. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that: (a) the spore preparation method is very important in determining the rate of spore germination with dodecylamine, (b) wild-type spores germinated by dodecylamine progress only part way through the germination process, (c) dodecylamine may trigger spore germination by a novel mechanism involving the activation of neither the spore's nutrient germinant receptors nor the cortex-lytic enzymes, and (d) dodecylamine may trigger spore germination by directly or indirectly activating release of DPA from the spore core, through the opening of channels for DPA in the spore's inner membrane. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: These results provide new insight into the mechanism of spore germination with the cationic surfactant dodecylamine, and also into the mechanism of spore germination in general. New knowledge of mechanisms to stimulate spore germination may have applied utility, as germinated spores are much more sensitive to processing treatments than are dormant spores.  相似文献   

15.

Background

Germination is the irreversible loss of spore-specific properties prior to outgrowth. Because germinating spores become more susceptible to killing by stressors, induction of germination has been proposed as a spore control strategy. However, this strategy is limited by superdormant spores that remain unaffected by germinants. Harsh chemicals and heat activation are effective for stimulating germination of superdormant spores but are impractical for use in a hospital setting, where Clostridium difficile spores present a challenge. Here, we tested whether osmotic activation solutes will provide a mild alternative for stimulation of superdormant C. difficile spores in the presence of germinants as previously demonstrated in several species of Bacillus. In addition, we tested the hypothesis that the limitations of superdormancy can be circumvented with a combined approach using nisin, a FDA-approved safe bacteriocin, to inhibit outgrowth of germinated spores and osmotic activation solutes to enhance outgrowth inhibition by stimulating superdormant spores.

Principal Findings

Exposure to germination solution triggered ∼1 log10 colony forming units (CFU) of spores to germinate, and heat activation increased the spores that germinated to >2.5 log10CFU. Germinating spores, in contrast to dormant spores, became susceptible to inhibition by nisin. The presence of osmotic activation solutes did not stimulate germination of superdormant C. difficile spores exposed to germination solution. But, in the absence of germination solution, osmotic activation solutes enhanced nisin inhibition of superdormant spores to >3.5 log10CFU. The synergistic effects of osmotic activation solutes and nisin were associated with loss of membrane integrity.

Conclusions

These findings suggest that the synergistic effects of osmotic activation and nisin bypass the limitations of germination as a spore control strategy, and might be a novel method to safely and effectively reduce the burden of C.difficile spores on skin and environmental surfaces.  相似文献   

16.
Bacillus subtilis spores break their metabolic dormancy through a process called germination. Spore germination is triggered by specific molecules called germinants, which are thought to act by binding to and stimulating spore receptors. Three homologous operons, gerA, gerB, and gerK, were previously proposed to encode germinant receptors because inactivating mutations in those genes confer a germinant-specific defect in germination. To more definitely identify genes that encode germinant receptors, we isolated mutants whose spores germinated in the novel germinant D-alanine, because such mutants would likely contain gain-of-function mutations in genes that encoded preexisting germinant receptors. Three independent mutants were isolated, and in each case the mutant phenotype was shown to result from a single dominant mutation in the gerB operon. Two of the mutations altered the gerBA gene, whereas the third affected the gerBB gene. These results suggest that gerBA and gerBB encode components of the germinant receptor. Furthermore, genetic interactions between the wild-type gerB and the mutant gerBA and gerBB alleles suggested that the germinant receptor might be a complex containing GerBA, GerBB, and probably other proteins. Thus, we propose that the gerB operon encodes at least two components of a multicomponent germinant receptor.  相似文献   

17.
Germination of Bacillus subtilis spores is normally initiated when nutrients from the environment interact with germinant receptors (GRs) in the spores'' inner membrane (IM), in which most of the lipids are immobile. GRs and another germination protein, GerD, colocalize in the IM of dormant spores in a small focus termed the “germinosome,” and this colocalization or focus formation is dependent upon GerD, which is also essential for rapid GR-dependent spore germination. To determine the fate of the germinosome and germination proteins during spore germination and outgrowth, we employed differential interference microscopy and epifluorescence microscopy to track germinating spores with fluorescent fusions to germination proteins and used Western blot analyses to measure germination protein levels. We found that after initiation of spore germination, the germinosome foci ultimately changed into larger disperse patterns, with ≥75% of spore populations displaying this pattern in spores germinated for 1 h, although >80% of spores germinated for 30 min retained the germinosome foci. Western blot analysis revealed that levels of GR proteins and the SpoVA proteins essential for dipicolinic acid release changed minimally during this period, although GerD levels decreased ∼50% within 15 min in germinated spores. Since the dispersion of the germinosome during germination was slower than the decrease in GerD levels, either germinosome stability is not compromised by ∼2-fold decreases in GerD levels or other factors, such as restoration of rapid IM lipid mobility, are also significant in germinosome dispersion as spore germination proceeds.  相似文献   

18.
The Bacillus subtilis spoVAEa and spoVAF genes are expressed in developing spores as members of the spoVA operon, which encodes proteins essential for the uptake and release of dipicolinic acid (DPA) during spore formation and germination. SpoVAF is likely an integral inner spore membrane protein and exhibits sequence identity to A subunits of the spore''s nutrient germinant receptors (GRs), while SpoVAEa is a soluble protein with no obvious signals to allow its passage across a membrane. However, like SpoVAD, SpoVAEa is present on the outer surface of the spore''s inner membrane, as SpoVAEa was accessible to an external biotinylation agent in spores and SpoVAEa disappeared in parallel with SpoVAD during proteinase K treatment of germinated spores. SpoVAEa and SpoVAD were also distributed similarly in fractions of disrupted dormant spores. Unlike spoVAD, spoVAEa is absent from the genomes of some spore-forming members of the Bacillales and Clostridiales orders, although SpoVAEa''s amino acid sequence is conserved in species containing spoVAEa. B. subtilis strains lacking SpoVAF or SpoVAEa and SpoVAF sporulated normally, and the spores had normal DPA levels. Spores lacking SpoVAF or SpoVAEa and SpoVAF also germinated normally with non-GR-dependent germinants but more slowly than wild-type spores with GR-dependent germinants, and this germination defect was complemented by ectopic expression of the missing proteins.  相似文献   

19.
Spores of a Bacillus subtilis strain with a gerD deletion mutation (Delta gerD) responded much slower than wild-type spores to nutrient germinants, although they did ultimately germinate, outgrow, and form colonies. Spores lacking GerD and nutrient germinant receptors also germinated slowly with nutrients, as did Delta gerD spores in which nutrient receptors were overexpressed. The germination defect of Delta gerD spores was not suppressed by many changes in the sporulation or germination conditions. Germination of Delta gerD spores was also slower than that of wild-type spores with a pressure of 150 MPa, which triggers spore germination through nutrient receptors. Ectopic expression of gerD suppressed the slow germination of Delta gerD spores with nutrients, but overexpression of GerD did not increase rates of spore germination. Loss of GerD had no effect on spore germination induced by agents that do not act through nutrient receptors, including a 1:1 chelate of Ca2+ and dipicolinic acid, dodecylamine, lysozyme in hypertonic medium, a pressure of 500 MPa, and spontaneous germination of spores that lack all nutrient receptors. Deletion of GerD's putative signal peptide or change of its likely diacylglycerylated cysteine residue to alanine reduced GerD function. The latter findings suggest that GerD is located in a spore membrane, most likely the inner membrane, where the nutrient receptors are located. All these data suggest that, while GerD is not essential for nutrient germination, this protein has an important role in spores' rapid response to nutrient germinants, by either direct interaction with nutrient receptors or some signal transduction essential for germination.  相似文献   

20.
Short exposures of Bacillus spores to nutrient germinants can commit spores to germinate when germinants are removed or their binding to the spores'' nutrient germinant receptors (GRs) is inhibited. Bacillus subtilis spores were exposed to germinants for various periods, followed by germinant removal to prevent further commitment. Release of spore dipicolinic acid (DPA) was then measured by differential interference contrast microscopy to monitor germination of multiple individual spores, and spores did not release DPA after 1 to 2 min of germinant exposure until ∼7 min after germinant removal. With longer germinant exposures, percentages of committed spores with times for completion of DPA release (Trelease) greater than the time of germinant removal (Tb) increased, while the time TlagTb, where Tlag represents the time when rapid DPA release began, was decreased but rapid DPA release times (ΔTrelease = TreleaseTlag) were increased; Factors affecting average Trelease values and the percentages of committed spores were germinant exposure time, germinant concentration, sporulation conditions, and spore heat activation, as previously shown for commitment of spore populations. Surprisingly, germination of spores given a 2nd short germinant exposure 30 to 45 min after a 1st exposure of the same duration was significantly higher than after the 1st exposure, but the number of spores that germinated in the 2nd germinant exposure decreased as the interval between germinant exposures increased up to 12 h. The latter results indicate that spores have some memory, albeit transient, of their previous exposure to nutrient germinants.  相似文献   

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