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1.
Two strains of Arcobacter butzleri, ATCC 49616 and an environmental isolate, became nonculturable in seawater microcosms at 4 degrees C by 20 days and at room temperature by 14 days. Nonculturable cells were viable for up to 270 days of incubation in microcosms. Resuscitation of A. butzleri cells from microcosms at both temperatures was achieved 9 days after nutrient addition.  相似文献   

2.
The stability of Pasteurella piscicida strains in seawater and sediment microcosms at different temperatures (6 and 20 degrees C) was investigated during a 1-month period. Three strains of P. piscicida showed similar survival kinetics. By a standard plate count method they survived in water and sediment for only 6 to 12 days, depending on the strain and type of microcosm. During this starvation period, the metabolic activity of the cells was reduced by more than 80%. Culturable cells of each P. piscicida strain persisted better in sediment than in water, as well as at 20 degrees C compared to 6 degrees C. However, in all the microcosms, the acridine orange direct counts remained at about 10(5) cells per ml during the experimental period, which demonstrated that P. piscicida possesses a capacity to enter a viable but not culturable state. Moreover, dormant cells were always resuscitated by the addition of fresh medium to the microcosms, since we recovered numbers of culturable cells similar to the acridine orange direct counts. These resuscitated cells exhibited the same respiration rate as that seen prior to the start of the experiments. Although the biochemical, physiological, and serological characteristics; lipopolysaccharides; membrane proteins; and plasmid content of P. piscicida strains were unaffected during the starvation conditions, the dormant cells were smaller (dwarf cells) and had increased surface hydrophobicity. The starved cells maintained their infectivity and pathogenic potential for fish, with 50% lethal doses similar to those of the original strains.  相似文献   

3.
Survival of Vibrio fluvialis in seawater under starvation conditions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The viability of Vibrio fluvialis in seawater microcosms, with and without sediment was investigated. The strain survived as culturable bacteria for at least 1 year and the expression of its virulence factors was maintained. In microcosms containing sediment Vibrio fluvialis was more stable. Viable but nonculturable (VBNC) cells of Vibrio fluvialis were able to resuscitate to the culturable state up to 6 years of incubation in marine sediment. These cells recuperate their initial biochemical characteristics after 3 months of incubation in marine broth. Amplified 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) restriction analysis (ARDRA) was used to confirm that it is the same strain of Vibrio fluvialis which resists in all microcosms during a long period of time.  相似文献   

4.
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium DT104 11601 was tested for its ability to maintain viability in minimal, chemically defined solutions. Periodic monitoring of growth and survival in microcosms of different ion concentrations, maintained at various temperatures, showed a gradual decline in culturable organisms ( approximately 235 days) at 5 degrees C. Organisms maintained at a higher temperature (21 degrees C) showed continuous, equivalent CFU per milliliter ( approximately 10(6)) up to 400 days after inoculation. Fluorescence microscopy with Baclight revealed that nonculturable cells were actually viable, while observations with scanning electron microscopy showed that the cells had retained their structural integrity. Temperature upshift (56 degrees C +/- 0.5, 15 s) of the nonculturable organisms (5 degrees C) in Trypticase soy broth followed by immediate inoculation onto Trypticase soy agar (TSA) gave evidence of resuscitation. Interestingly, S. enterica serovar Typhimurium DT104 from the microcosms at either 5 degrees C (1 to 200 days) or 21 degrees C (1 to 250 days) did not show enhanced growth after intermittent inoculation onto catalase-supplemented TSA. Furthermore, cells from 21 degrees C microcosms exposed to oxidative and osmotic stress showed greater resistance to stresses over increasing times of exposure than did recently grown cells. It is possible that the exceptional survivability and resilience of this particular strain may in part reflect the growing importance of this multidrug-resistant organism, in general, as a cause of intestinal disease in humans. The fact that S. enterica serovar Typhimurium DT104 11601 is capable of modifying its physiological characteristics, including entry into and recovery from the viable but nonculturable state, suggests the overall possibility that S. enterica serovar Typhimurium DT104 may be able to respond uniquely to various adverse environmental conditions.  相似文献   

5.
Epidemiological studies of shigellosis in Bangladesh have demonstrated that surface-water sources can act as foci of infection. Studies of laboratory microcosms have shown that shigellae become nonculturable but remain viable when exposed to environmental samples of water. The present study was carried out to detect viable but nonculturable Shigella dysenteriae 1 from laboratory microcosms by the polymerase chain reaction and the fluorescent-antibody techniques. S. dysenteriae 1 was inoculated into laboratory microcosms consisting of water samples collected from ponds, lakes, rivers, and drains in Bangladesh. The survival of S. dysenteriae in microcosms was assessed by viable counting on MacConkey agar. After 2 to 3 weeks, S. dysenteriae 1 became nonculturable but remained viable. After 6 weeks, this nonculturable but viable S. dysenteriae 1 was detected by both the polymerase chain reaction and the fluorescent-antibody methods. The viable but nonculturable state of S. dysenteriae 1 demonstrated in this study may be important for understanding the epidemiology of shigellosis.  相似文献   

6.
AIMS: Physiological responses of marine luminous bacteria, Vibrio harveyi (ATCC 14216) and V. fischeri (UM1373) to nutrient-limited normal strength (35 ppt iso-osmolarity) and low (10 ppt hypo-osmolarity) salinity conditions were determined. METHODS AND RESULTS: Plate counts, direct viable counts, actively respiring cell counts, nucleoid-containing cell counts, and total counts were determined. Vibrio harveyi incubated at 22 degrees C in nutrient-limited artificial seawater (ASW) became nonculturable after approximately 62 and 45 d in microcosms of 35 ppt and 10 ppt ASW, respectively. In contrast, V. fischeri became nonculturable at approximately 55 and 31 d in similar microcosms. Recovery of both culturability and luminescence of cells in the viable but nonculturable state was achieved by addition of nutrient broth or nutrient broth supplemented with a carbon source, including luminescence-stimulating compounds. Temperature upshift from 22 degrees C to 30 degrees C or 37 degrees C did not result in recovery from nonculturability. CONCLUSIONS: The study confirms entry of V. harveyi and V. fischeri into the viable but nonculturable state under low-nutrient conditions and demonstrates nutrient-dependent resuscitation from this state. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: This study confirms loss of luminescence of V. harveyi and V. fischeri on entry into the viable but nonculturable state and suggests that enumeration of luminescent cells in water samples may be a rapid method to deduce the nutrient status of a water sample.  相似文献   

7.
The gfp-tagging method and lux-tagging method were compared to select a better method for verifying a viable but nonculturable (VBNC) state of bacteria in the environment. An environmental isolate of Salmonella typhi was chromosomally marked with a gfp gene encoding green fluorescent protein (GFP). The hybrid transposon mini-Tn5 gfp was transconjugated from E. coli to S. typhi. Using the same method, S. typhi was chromosomally marked with luxAB genes encoding luciferase. The survival of gfp-tagged S. typhi introduced into groundwater microcosms was examined by GFP-based plate count, total cell count, and a direct viable count method. In microcosms containing lux-tagged S. typhi, luminescence-based plate count and the measurement of bioluminescence of each microcosm sample were performed. In microcosms containing lux-tagged S. typhi, viable but nonculturable cells could not be detected by using luminometry. As no distinguishable luminescence signals from the background signals were found in samples containing no culturable cells, a VBNC state of S. typhi could not be verified in lux-based systems. However, comparison between GFP-based direct viable counts and plate counts was a good method for verifying the VBNC state of S. typhi. Because GFP-based direct viable count method provided a direct and precise estimation of viable cells of introduced bacteria into natural environments, it can be used for verifying the VBNC state of bacteria in environmental samples.  相似文献   

8.
The fate of Ralstonia solanacearum bv. 2, the causative agent of brown rot in potato, in aquatic habitats of temperate climate regions is still poorly understood. In this study, the population dynamics and the physiological response of R. solanacearum bv. 2 were tested in sterile pure water and in agricultural drainage water obtained from waterways near potato cropping fields in The Netherlands. The behaviour of five different biovar 2 isolates in drainage water at 20 degrees C was very similar among strains. One typical isolate with consistent virulence (strain 1609) was selected for further studies. The effects of temperature, light, canal sediment, seawater salts, and the presence of competing microorganisms on the survival of strain 1609 were assessed. Moreover, the impacts of the physiological state of the inoculum and the inoculum density were analyzed. The population dynamics of strain 1609 in sterile pure water were also characterized. In sterile pure water, the fate of R. solanacearum 1609 cells depended strongly on temperature, irrespective of inoculum density or physiological state. At 4 degrees C and 44 degrees C, strain 1609 CFU numbers showed declines, whereas the strain was able to undergo several cell divisions at 12 degrees C, 20 degrees C, and 28 degrees C. At 20 degrees C and 28 degrees C, repeated growth took place when the organism was serially transferred, at low inoculum density, from grown water cultures into fresh water devoid of nutrients. Both at low and high cell densities and regardless of physiological state, R. solanacearum 1609 cells persisted as culturable cells for limited periods of time in drainage water. A major effect of temperature was found, with survival being maximal at 12 degrees C, 20 degrees C, and 28 degrees C. Temperatures of 4 degrees C, 36 degrees C, or 44 degrees C induced accelerated declines of the culturable cell numbers. The drainage water biota had a strong effect on survival at 12 degrees C, 20 degrees C, and 28 degrees C, as the persistence of strain 1609 was significantly enhanced in sterile drainage water systems. Furthermore, there was a negative effect of incident light, in a light:dark regime, on the survival of R. solanacearum 1609 in natural drainage water. Also, levels of seawater salts realistic for drainage water in coastal areas were detrimental to strain survival. Ralstonia solanacearum 1609 showed considerable persistence in canal sediment saturated with drainage water, but died out quickly when this sediment was subjected to drying. Evidence was obtained for the conversion of R. solanacearum 1609 cells to nonculturable cells in water microcosms kept at 4 degrees C, but not in those kept at 20 degrees C. A substantial fraction of the cells found to be nonculturable were still viable, as evidenced by the direct viable count and by staining with the redox dye 5-cyano-2,3-ditolyl tetrazolium chloride. The potential occurrence of viable-but-nonculturable cells in natural waters poses a problem for the detection of R. solanacearum by cultivation-based methods.  相似文献   

9.
Ribotyping and RAPD profiling of a collection of 18 Streptococcus parauberis strains isolated from diseased turbot in Galicia (NW Spain) was performed in order to analyze the possible genetic variability within this bacterial fish pathogen. In addition, the value of this technique for intraspecific classification and epidemiological studies was evaluated. Ribopatterns of DNA digested with three endonucleases and hybridized with a cDNA probe complementary to highly conserved sequences in the 16S and 23S rRNA genes showed a great homogeneity among the turbot isolates. Compared with ribotyping, RAPD appeared to be a reliable and fast technique for discriminating between isolates of S. parauberis on the basis of their farm of isolation and, therefore, represents a powerful tool for epidemiological studies of this fish pathogen.  相似文献   

10.
At present, no reports exist on the isolation of the eel pathogen Vibrio vulnificus biotype 2 from water samples. Nevertheless, it has recently been demonstrated that this biotype can use water as a route of infection. In the present study, the survival of this pathogen in artificial seawater (ASW) microcosms at different temperatures (25 and 5 degrees C) was investigated during a 50-day period, with biotype 1 as a control, V. vulnificus biotype 2 was able to survive in the culturable state in ASW at 25 degrees C in the free-living form, at least for 50 days, entering into the nonculturable state when exposed to low temperature. In this state, this microorganism survived with reduced rates of activity, showing marked changes in size and morphology. The rate at which cells became nonculturable was dependent on their physiological age. The capsule seems not to be necessary for the survival of biotype 2 in aquatic environments as a free-living organism. Culturability remained the highest on modified salt water yeast extract agar, which is closer in salt and nutrient composition to ASW than heart infusion agar. Biotype 2 cells recovered culturability on solid media after an increase of incubation temperature from 5 to 25 degrees C. Culturable cells of this bacterium maintained infectivity for either eel or mice, while dormant cells seemed to lose their virulence. The former finding suggests that the aquatic environment is a reservoir and vehicle of transmission of this pathogen.  相似文献   

11.
Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium DT104 11601was tested for its ability to maintain viability in minimal, chemically defined solutions. Periodic monitoring of growth and survival in microcosms of different ion concentrations, maintained at various temperatures, showed a gradual decline in culturable organisms (~235 days) at 5°C. Organisms maintained at a higher temperature (21°C) showed continuous, equivalent CFU per milliliter (~106) up to 400 days after inoculation. Fluorescence microscopy with Baclight revealed that nonculturable cells were actually viable, while observations with scanning electron microscopy showed that the cells had retained their structural integrity. Temperature upshift (56°C ± 0.5, 15 s) of the nonculturable organisms (5°C) in Trypticase soy broth followed by immediate inoculation onto Trypticase soy agar (TSA) gave evidence of resuscitation. Interestingly, S. enterica serovar Typhimurium DT104 from the microcosms at either 5°C (1 to 200 days) or 21°C (1 to 250 days) did not show enhanced growth after intermittent inoculation onto catalase-supplemented TSA. Furthermore, cells from 21°C microcosms exposed to oxidative and osmotic stress showed greater resistance to stresses over increasing times of exposure than did recently grown cells. It is possible that the exceptional survivability and resilience of this particular strain may in part reflect the growing importance of this multidrug-resistant organism, in general, as a cause of intestinal disease in humans. The fact that S. enterica serovar Typhimurium DT104 11601 is capable of modifying its physiological characteristics, including entry into and recovery from the viable but nonculturable state, suggests the overall possibility that S. enterica serovar Typhimurium DT104 may be able to respond uniquely to various adverse environmental conditions.  相似文献   

12.
Aims:  To screen for the existence and determine the structure of Tn 916 -like element in Streptococcus parauberis serotype II strains isolated from cultured Japanese flounder in western Japan.
Methods and Results:  In this study, the structure of Tn 916 -like element and the flanking regions were characterized by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and inverse PCR, followed by cloning and sequencing. The Tn 916 -like element is 18 031 bp in length and composed of 22 ORFs. Southern blot hybridization analysis showed that the Hin cII-digested internal structures of Tn 916 -like elements yielded two patterns among S. parauberis serotype II strains. The flanking sequences were identical with the corresponding region of S. parauberis serotype I strain except for the addition of 6-bp coupling sequence (ATCATA) being adjacent to the upstream of the element.
Conclusion:  The Tn 916 -like element exhibited high homology (more than 99%) with Tn 916 observed in other streptococci and enterococci and was integrated in the same site of chromosome for all of the tested S. parauberis serotype II strains.
Significance and Impact of the Study:  The results indicate that the Tn 916- like element encoding tet (M) gene is present in all of the tested S. parauberis serotype II strains, which are disseminated in the flounder-culturing areas in western Japan.  相似文献   

13.
Vertical soil microcosms flushed with groundwater were used to study the influence of water movement on survival and transport of a genetically engineered Pseudomonas fluorescens C5t strain through a loamy sand and a loam soil. Transport of cells introduced into the top 1 cm of the vertical soil microcosms was dependent on the flow rate of water and the number of times microcosms were flushed with groundwater. The presence of wheat roots growing downward in the microcosms contributed only slightly to the movement of P. fluorescens C5t cells to lower soil regions of the loamy sand microcosms, but enhanced downward transport in the loam microcosms. Furthermore, the introduced P. fluorescens C5t cells were detected in the effluent water samples even after three flushes of groundwater and 10 days of incubation. As evidenced by a comparison of counts from immunofluorescence and selective plating, nonculturable C5t cells occurred in day 10 soil and percolated water samples, primarily of the loamy sand microcosms. Vertical soil microcosms that use water movement may be useful in studying the survival and transport of genetically engineered bacteria in soil under a variety of conditions prior to field testing.  相似文献   

14.
Vertical soil microcosms flushed with groundwater were used to study the influence of water movement on survival and transport of a genetically engineered Pseudomonas fluorescens C5t strain through a loamy sand and a loam soil. Transport of cells introduced into the top 1 cm of the vertical soil microcosms was dependent on the flow rate of water and the number of times microcosms were flushed with groundwater. The presence of wheat roots growing downward in the microcosms contributed only slightly to the movement of P. fluorescens C5t cells to lower soil regions of the loamy sand microcosms, but enhanced downward transport in the loam microcosms. Furthermore, the introduced P. fluorescens C5t cells were detected in the effluent water samples even after three flushes of groundwater and 10 days of incubation. As evidenced by a comparison of counts from immunofluorescence and selective plating, nonculturable C5t cells occurred in day 10 soil and percolated water samples, primarily of the loamy sand microcosms. Vertical soil microcosms that use water movement may be useful in studying the survival and transport of genetically engineered bacteria in soil under a variety of conditions prior to field testing.  相似文献   

15.
Entry into the viable but nonculturable state by the human bacterial pathogen Vibrio vulnificus in artificial seawater microcosms was studied. In contrast to the long-term culturability exhibited by cells incubated under these starvation conditions at room temperature, cells exposed to a temperature downshift to 5 degrees C exhibited an immediate decrease in culturability. Cells incubated at low temperature exhibited a morphological change from rods to cocci but demonstrated no reductive division. Of 10 factors studied which might affect the nonculturable response in V. vulnificus, only the physiological age of the cells was found to significantly affect the rate at which cells became nonculturable. The nonculturable response appears to be related to the starvation response, as prestarvation at room temperature for 24 h was found to eliminate the nonculturable response of cells subsequently incubated at 5 degrees C. This observation suggests that the synthesis of starvation proteins may repress the viable but nonculturable program displayed during low-temperature incubation. The possible ecological significance of these findings is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
Entry into the viable but nonculturable state by the human bacterial pathogen Vibrio vulnificus in artificial seawater microcosms was studied. In contrast to the long-term culturability exhibited by cells incubated under these starvation conditions at room temperature, cells exposed to a temperature downshift to 5 degrees C exhibited an immediate decrease in culturability. Cells incubated at low temperature exhibited a morphological change from rods to cocci but demonstrated no reductive division. Of 10 factors studied which might affect the nonculturable response in V. vulnificus, only the physiological age of the cells was found to significantly affect the rate at which cells became nonculturable. The nonculturable response appears to be related to the starvation response, as prestarvation at room temperature for 24 h was found to eliminate the nonculturable response of cells subsequently incubated at 5 degrees C. This observation suggests that the synthesis of starvation proteins may repress the viable but nonculturable program displayed during low-temperature incubation. The possible ecological significance of these findings is discussed.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract Extended survival of Legionella pneumophila , using both a clinical and an environmental isolate, was studied in drinking water, creek water, and estuarine water microcosms. Legionella populations were monitored by acridine orange direct counts (AODC) and viable count on buffered charcoal yeast extract agar amended with alpha-ketoglutarate (BCYEα). Initial colony counts of the clinical isolate in drinking and creek water microcosms were 2 × 108 cfu/ml and, after incubation for 1.5 years, the plate counts decreased to 3 × 106 cfu/ml. The AODC counts, however, did not change significantly. The clinical isolate in estuarine water decreased in plate counts to 102 (cfu/ml) over the same period. After incubation for 1.5 years at 15°C in the microcosms, Legionella plate counts of creek and drinking water decreased by two logs. Direct microscopic examination of aliquots removed from all microcosms revealed the presence of small bacilli, large bacilli and rare filamentous cells. The environmental isolate demonstrated only one colony morphology upon culture on BCYEα. Interestingly, after four months incubation in the microcosm, upon plating the clinical isolate on BCYEα, two distinct colony types were evident. Examination by immunofluorescent staining employing a monoclonal antibody against L. pneumophila revealed both bacillus and filamentous forms. The total cellular proteins of both morphotypes were examined by sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylyamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE), demonstrating identical protein patterns. Those Legionella cells remaining culturable during 1.5 years of incubation grew rapidly when transferred to BCYEα. Incubation was continued and it was found that some strains of L. pneumophila serogroup 1 can remain viable for longer than 2.4 years under low-nutrient conditions.  相似文献   

18.
The viabilities of five strains of Vibrio vulnificus were evaluated during the storage of the organisms in sterile seawater at 5 degrees C. The number of CFU was measured by plate count methods on rich media. The total cell numbers were determined by direct microscopic count methods. The titer of CFU declined logarithmically to undetectable levels over a period of 2 to 3 weeks, while the total cell numbers were unchanged. Midway through each study, higher culturable cell counts began to be observed on plates containing catalase or sodium pyruvate; during the latter stages of the study, the plate counts on such media were up to 1,000-fold higher than those on unsupplemented plates. Because autoclaving is known to generate hydrogen peroxide in rich media, and because catalase and sodium pyruvate are known to eliminate hydrogen peroxide, it appears that the conditions of the experiments led to the selection of a hydrogen peroxide-sensitive culturable cell subpopulation. At the time of the final stage of the decline in viability of each culture, hydrogen peroxide-sensitive cells were the only culturable cells present. Warming samples of the cultures to room temperature led to the growth of these residual culturable cells, utilizing nutrients provided by the nonculturable cells. The cells that grew recovered hydrogen peroxide resistance. When mixtures of culturable and nonculturable cells were diluted to the point where only nonculturable cells were present, or when the hydrogen peroxide-sensitive culturable cells had declined to undetectable levels, warming had no effect; no culturable cells were recovered. Warming has been reported to "resuscitate" nonculturable cells. Recognition of the existence of hydrogen peroxide-sensitive culturable cell populations, as well as their ability to grow to high levels in the warmed seawater microcosms, leads instead to the conclusion that while warming permits culturable cells to grow, it has no effect on nonculturable cells.  相似文献   

19.
The stability of routinely used, population genetic markers through approximately 1 year of continuous laboratory growth was investigated in the common, plant pathogentic ascomycete Sclerotinia sclerotiorum. Given reports of accelerated mutation rates at higher temperatures, both a permissive temperature, 22 degrees C, and a temperature at the high end of tolerance, 30 degrees C, were employed. Because mycelial growth rate was tracked among mitotic lineages established for each strain, a subsidiary objective was addressed, testing the stability of a 30 degrees C-competent phenotype. Twelve laboratory strains of S. sclerotiorum, including the genome sequence isolate, 1980, were propagated serially for up to 400 days at 22 degrees C. Five of these strains were also propagated at 30 degrees C. No mutations were observed in mycelial compatibility groupings (MCGs), DNA fingerprints, alleles at 7 microsatellite loci, or alleles at 56 AFLP loci. All of these markers show variation in field populations, which are likely much larger and influenced by different and more stochastic environmental processes. In S. sclerotiorum, population genetic markers were stable over time through serial transfer and growth of laboratory strains at both 22 degrees C and 30 degrees C. The strain isolated after extended drought and capable of infecting plants at 28 degrees C demonstrated the stability of its high temperature-competent phenotype, in addition to its stable growth rate at 22 degrees C. This observation has implications for modeling pathogen tolerance or adaptation under conditions of environmental stochasticity, including climate warming.  相似文献   

20.
The stability of routinely used, population genetic markers through approximately 1 year of continuous laboratory growth was investigated in the common, plant pathogentic ascomycete Sclerotinia sclerotiorum. Given reports of accelerated mutation rates at higher temperatures, both a permissive temperature, 22 degrees C, and a temperature at the high end of tolerance, 30 degrees C, were employed. Because mycelial growth rate was tracked among mitotic lineages established for each strain, a subsidiary objective was addressed, testing the stability of a 30 degrees C-competent phenotype. Twelve laboratory strains of S. sclerotiorum, including the genome sequence isolate, 1980, were propagated serially for up to 400 days at 22 degrees C. Five of these strains were also propagated at 30 degrees C. No mutations were observed in mycelial compatibility groupings (MCGs), DNA fingerprints, alleles at 7 microsatellite loci, or alleles at 56 AFLP loci. All of these markers show variation in field populations, which are likely much larger and influenced by different and more stochastic environmental processes. In S. sclerotiorum, population genetic markers were stable over time through serial transfer and growth of laboratory strains at both 22 degrees C and 30 degrees C. The strain isolated after extended drought and capable of infecting plants at 28 degrees C demonstrated the stability of its high temperature-competent phenotype, in addition to its stable growth rate at 22 degrees C. This observation has implications for modeling pathogen tolerance or adaptation under conditions of environmental stochasticity, including climate warming.  相似文献   

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