Properties of spores of Bacillus subtilis with or without a transposon that decreases spore germination and increases spore wet heat resistance

Author(s):  
Yannong Luo ◽  
George Korza ◽  
Angela M. DeMarco ◽  
Oscar P. Kuipers ◽  
Yong‐qing Li ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 667
Author(s):  
Zhiwei Tu ◽  
Peter Setlow ◽  
Stanley Brul ◽  
Gertjan Kramer

Bacterial endospores (spores) are among the most resistant living forms on earth. Spores of Bacillus subtilis A163 show extremely high resistance to wet heat compared to spores of laboratory strains. In this study, we found that spores of B. subtilis A163 were indeed very wet heat resistant and released dipicolinic acid (DPA) very slowly during heat treatment. We also determined the proteome of vegetative cells and spores of B. subtilis A163 and the differences in these proteomes from those of the laboratory strain PY79, spores of which are much less heat resistant. This proteomic characterization identified 2011 proteins in spores and 1901 proteins in vegetative cells of B. subtilis A163. Surprisingly, spore morphogenic protein SpoVM had no homologs in B. subtilis A163. Comparing protein expression between these two strains uncovered 108 proteins that were differentially present in spores and 93 proteins differentially present in cells. In addition, five of the seven proteins on an operon in strain A163, which is thought to be primarily responsible for this strain’s spores high heat resistance, were also identified. These findings reveal proteomic differences of the two strains exhibiting different resistance to heat and form a basis for further mechanistic analysis of the high heat resistance of B. subtilis A163 spores.


2001 ◽  
Vol 183 (2) ◽  
pp. 779-784 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elizabeth Melly ◽  
Peter Setlow

ABSTRACT Spores of Bacillus subtilis are significantly more resistant to wet heat than are their vegetative cell counterparts. Analysis of the effects of mutations in and the expression of fusions of a coding gene for a thermostable β-galactosidase to a number of heat shock genes has shown that heat shock proteins play no significant role in the wet heat resistance of B. subtilis spores.


2017 ◽  
Vol 83 (7) ◽  
Author(s):  
Antonina O. Krawczyk ◽  
Anne de Jong ◽  
Jimmy Omony ◽  
Siger Holsappel ◽  
Marjon H. J. Wells-Bennik ◽  
...  

ABSTRACT Spore heat resistance, germination, and outgrowth are problematic bacterial properties compromising food safety and quality. Large interstrain variation in these properties makes prediction and control of spore behavior challenging. High-level heat resistance and slow germination of spores of some natural Bacillus subtilis isolates, encountered in foods, have been attributed to the occurrence of the spoVA 2mob operon carried on the Tn1546 transposon. In this study, we further investigate the correlation between the presence of this operon in high-level-heat-resistant spores and their germination efficiencies before and after exposure to various sublethal heat treatments (heat activation, or HA), which are known to significantly improve spore responses to nutrient germinants. We show that high-level-heat-resistant spores harboring spoVA 2mob required higher HA temperatures for efficient germination than spores lacking spoVA 2mob. The optimal spore HA requirements additionally depended on the nutrients used to trigger germination, l-alanine (l-Ala), or a mixture of l-asparagine, d-glucose, d-fructose, and K+ (AGFK). The distinct HA requirements of these two spore germination pathways are likely related to differences in properties of specific germinant receptors. Moreover, spores that germinated inefficiently in AGFK contained specific changes in sequences of the GerB and GerK germinant receptors, which are involved in this germination response. In contrast, no relation was found between transcription levels of main germination genes and spore germination phenotypes. The findings presented in this study have great implications for practices in the food industry, where heat treatments are commonly used to inactivate pathogenic and spoilage microbes, including bacterial spore formers. IMPORTANCE This study describes a strong variation in spore germination capacities and requirements for a heat activation treatment, i.e., an exposure to sublethal heat that increases spore responsiveness to nutrient germination triggers, among 17 strains of B. subtilis, including 9 isolates from spoiled food products. Spores of industrial foodborne isolates exhibited, on average, less efficient and slower germination responses and required more severe heat activation than spores from other sources. High heat activation requirements and inefficient, slow germination correlated with elevated resistance of spores to heat and with specific genetic features, indicating a common genetic basis of these three phenotypic traits. Clearly, interstrain variation and numerous factors that shape spore germination behavior challenge standardization of methods to recover highly heat-resistant spores from the environment and have an impact on the efficacy of preservation techniques used by the food industry to control spores.


Author(s):  
Julia Kanaan ◽  
Jillian Murray ◽  
Ryan Higgins ◽  
Mishil Nana ◽  
Angela M. DeMarco ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 60 ◽  
pp. 102291 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lei Rao ◽  
Yongtao Wang ◽  
Fang Chen ◽  
Xiaosong Hu ◽  
Xiaojun Liao ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 184 (2) ◽  
pp. 584-587 ◽  
Author(s):  
Federico Tovar-Rojo ◽  
Monica Chander ◽  
Barbara Setlow ◽  
Peter Setlow

ABSTRACT Bacillus subtilis cells with mutations in the spoVA operon do not complete sporulation. However, a spoVA strain with mutations that remove all three of the spore’s functional nutrient germinant receptors (termed the ger3 mutations) or the cortex lytic enzyme SleB (but not CwlJ) did complete sporulation. ger3 spoVA and sleB spoVA spores lack dipicolinic acid (DPA) and have lower core wet densities and levels of wet heat resistance than wild-type or ger3 spores. These properties of ger3 spoVA and sleB spoVA spores are identical to those of ger3 spoVF and sleB spoVF spores that lack DPA due to deletion of the spoVF operon coding for DPA synthetase. Sporulation in the presence of exogenous DPA restored DPA levels in ger3 spoVF spores to 53% of the wild-type spore levels, but there was no incorporation of exogenous DPA into ger3 spoVA spores. These data indicate that one or more products of the spoVA operon are involved in DPA transport into the developing forespore during sporulation.


2011 ◽  
Vol 77 (19) ◽  
pp. 6746-6754 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jose-Luis Sanchez-Salas ◽  
Barbara Setlow ◽  
Pengfei Zhang ◽  
Yong-qing Li ◽  
Peter Setlow

ABSTRACTThe first ∼10% of spores released from sporangia (early spores) duringBacillus subtilissporulation were isolated, and their properties were compared to those of the total spores produced from the same culture. The early spores had significantly lower resistance to wet heat and hypochlorite than the total spores but identical resistance to dry heat and UV radiation. Early and total spores also had the same levels of core water, dipicolinic acid, and Ca and germinated similarly with several nutrient germinants. The wet heat resistance of the early spores could be increased to that of total spores if early spores were incubated in conditioned sporulation medium for ∼24 h at 37°C (maturation), and some hypochlorite resistance was also restored. The maturation of early spores took place in pH 8 buffer with Ca2+but was blocked by EDTA; maturation was also seen with early spores of strains lacking the CotE protein or the coat-associated transglutaminase, both of which are needed for normal coat structure. Nonetheless, it appears to be most likely that it is changes in coat structure that are responsible for the increased resistance to wet heat and hypochlorite upon early spore maturation.


2016 ◽  
Vol 198 (11) ◽  
pp. 1694-1707 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Lauren Donnelly ◽  
Kelly A. Fimlaid ◽  
Aimee Shen

ABSTRACTThe spore-forming obligate anaerobeClostridium difficileis a leading cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea around the world. In order forC. difficileto cause infection, its metabolically dormant spores must germinate in the gastrointestinal tract. During germination, spores degrade their protective cortex peptidoglycan layers, release dipicolinic acid (DPA), and hydrate their cores. InC. difficile, cortex hydrolysis is necessary for DPA release, whereas inBacillus subtilis, DPA release is necessary for cortex hydrolysis. Given this difference, we tested whether DPA synthesis and/or release was required forC. difficilespore germination by constructing mutations in eitherspoVACordpaAB, which encode an ion channel predicted to transport DPA into the forespore and the enzyme complex predicted to synthesize DPA, respectively.C. difficilespoVACanddpaABmutant spores lacked DPA but could be stably purified and were more hydrated than wild-type spores; in contrast,B. subtilisspoVACanddpaABmutant spores were unstable. AlthoughC. difficilespoVACanddpaABmutant spores exhibited wild-type germination responses, they were more readily killed by wet heat. Cortex hydrolysis was not affected by this treatment, indicating that wet heat inhibits a stage downstream of this event. Interestingly,C. difficilespoVACmutant spores were significantly more sensitive to heat treatment thandpaABmutant spores, indicating that SpoVAC plays additional roles in conferring heat resistance. Taken together, our results demonstrate that SpoVAC and DPA synthetase controlC. difficilespore resistance and reveal differential requirements for these proteins among theFirmicutes.IMPORTANCEClostridium difficileis a spore-forming obligate anaerobe that causes ∼500,000 infections per year in the United States. Although spore germination is essential forC. difficileto cause disease, the factors required for this process have been only partially characterized. This study describes the roles of two factors, DpaAB and SpoVAC, which control the synthesis and release of dipicolinic acid (DPA), respectively, from bacterial spores. Previous studies of these proteins in other spore-forming organisms indicated that they are differentially required for spore formation, germination, and resistance. We now show that the proteins are dispensable forC. difficilespore formation and germination but are necessary for heat resistance. Thus, our study further highlights the diverse functions of DpaAB and SpoVAC in spore-forming organisms.


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (7) ◽  
pp. 3793
Author(s):  
Sophie Blinker ◽  
Jocelyne Vreede ◽  
Peter Setlow ◽  
Stanley Brul

Bacillus subtilis forms dormant spores upon nutrient depletion. Germinant receptors (GRs) in spore’s inner membrane respond to ligands such as L-alanine, and trigger spore germination. In B. subtilis spores, GerA is the major GR, and has three subunits, GerAA, GerAB, and GerAC. L-Alanine activation of GerA requires all three subunits, but which binds L-alanine is unknown. To date, how GRs trigger germination is unknown, in particular due to lack of detailed structural information about B subunits. Using homology modelling with molecular dynamics (MD) simulations, we present structural predictions for the integral membrane protein GerAB. These predictions indicate that GerAB is an α-helical transmembrane protein containing a water channel. The MD simulations with free L-alanine show that alanine binds transiently to specific sites on GerAB. These results provide a starting point for unraveling the mechanism of L-alanine mediated signaling by GerAB, which may facilitate early events in spore germination.


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