Abstract: | The adaptation of enteric bacteria in seawater has previously been described in terms of nutrient starvation. In the present paper, we bring experimental arguments suggesting that survival of these microorganisms could also depend on their ability to overcome the effects of osmotic stress. We analyzed the influence of osmoregulatory mechanisms (potassium transport, transport and accumulation of organic osmolytes) on the survival of Escherichia coli in seawater microcosms by using mutants lacking components of the osmotic stress response. Long-term protection was afforded to cells by growth in a medium whose osmotic pressure was increased by either NaCl, LiCl, or saccharose. Achievement of the protection state depended at least partly on osmoregulatory mechanisms, but differed when these were activated or induced during prior growth or in resting cells suspended in phosphate buffer or in seawater. When achieved during growth, K+ transport, glycine-betaine (GBT) synthesis or transport, and trehalose synthesis helped increase the ability to survive in seawater. Protection by GBT was also obtained with resting cells in a phosphate buffer at high osmotic pressure. However, when added only to the seawater, GBT did not change the survival ability of cells no matter what their osmoregulation potential. These results showed that the survival of E. coli cells in seawater depends, at least partly, on whether they possess certain genes which enable them to regulate osmotic pressure and whether they can be stimulated to express those genes before or after their release into the environment. This expression requires nutrients as the substrates from which the corresponding gene products are made. |