Azotobacter vinelandii
, in late exponential growth phase, encysts when the glucose in the medium is replaced with β-hydroxybutyrate. A final cell division then occurs without apparent deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) synthesis, resulting in a reduction from two to one nucleoids per cell and a final DNA content of 3.2 × 10
−14
g per cell. This is also the DNA content per cyst. A β-hydroxybutyrate dehydrogenase is derepressed by the addition of the inducer and is identical to the enzyme in acetate-grown cells in its
p
H optimum, Michaelis constant for substrate, temperature-activity response, and mobility during electrophoresis in acrylamide gel.
Azotobacter vinelandii
cysts undergo conversion to vegetative cells in Burk's nitrogen-free medium utilizing glucose, sucrose, or acetate. In 1% glucose, this overall process was complete in 8 hr and consisted of a germination and an outgrowth phase. Respiration, ribonucleic acid, and protein synthesis began soon after the addition of the germinant, and these processes proceeded at rates characteristic of the germination. The rates of respiration and synthesis increased sharply between 4 and 5 hr, the beginning of the outgrowth, at which time deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis and nitrogen fixation began. Respiration, macromolecular synthesis and nitrogen fixation continued at high rates until the emergence of vegetative cells from the cyst coats.
These results indicate that the silicone tape fills a performance-expectation gap of current acrylic tapes among users of tapes on patients with fragile or at-risk skin.
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