2013
DOI: 10.1128/jb.00325-13
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Investigating the Functional Hierarchy of Bacillus megaterium PV361 Spore Germinant Receptors

Abstract: Spores of Bacillus megaterium QM B1551 germinate rapidly when exposed to a number of single-trigger germinant compounds, including glucose, proline, leucine, and certain inorganic salts. However, spores of strain PV361, a plasmidless QM B1551 derivative that lacks the GerU germinant receptor (GR) responsible for mediating germination in response to single-trigger compounds, can germinate efficiently when incubated in nutritionally rich media, presumably via activation of additional germinant receptors. In this… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…B. megaterium spore viability was determined at 30°C to minimize mucoid colony formation, which interferes with the formation of isolated colonies. The viability of treated and purified FB73 and GC614 spores was not measured, as these spores germinate extremely poorly with nutrient germinants (15,18).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…B. megaterium spore viability was determined at 30°C to minimize mucoid colony formation, which interferes with the formation of isolated colonies. The viability of treated and purified FB73 and GC614 spores was not measured, as these spores germinate extremely poorly with nutrient germinants (15,18).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The GR-dependent germinants used were as follows: B. subtilis spores, 10 mM L-valine or a mixture of 10 mM L-asparagine, 10 mM D-glucose, 10 mM D-fructose, and 10 mM KCl (AGFK); B. megaterium spores, 10 mM D-glucose or 50 mM KBr. Tb-DPA fluorescence was read every 5 min for 30 min to 2 h. Untreated spores were heat activated prior to germination as follows: 30 min or 2 h at 75°C for B. subtilis spores germinating with L-valine or AGFK, respectively, and 30 min at 60°C for B. megaterium spores (18,23). After heat activation, spores were cooled on ice for at least 15 min prior to germination experiments.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The B. megaterium strains used were QM B1551 (wild type) (originally obtained from H. S. Levinson) and two isogenic derivatives, GC614 (13), lacking genes encoding all functional GRs, and PS4241 (15), lacking the genes encoding the two redundant cortex-lytic enzymes (CLEs), CwlJ and SleB, that degrade spore cortex peptidoglycan during germination. The B. subtilis strains used were PS533 (wild type) (18), a prototrophic laboratory 168 strain that also carries plasmid pUB110 expressing kanamycin resistance, and an isogenic derivative, FB73 (14), that lacks plasmid pUB110 and genes for all functional GRs.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, a potentially simpler way to deal with this problem is to use spores that do not respond to external nutrient germinants because they lack the spore proteins that recognize and trigger germination in response to nutrient germinants (2). These proteins are termed germinant receptors (GRs), and molecular genetic manipulation has generated strains of B. megaterium and B. subtilis that lack all functional GRs (13,14).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The GRs are clearly of crucial importance to nutrient germination, as spores of several Bacillus species that have been engineered to lack functional GRs exhibit extremely low levels of germination-as low as 0.1% per day on nutrient media (46,47). The precise mechanism of this spontaneous GR-independent germination is not clear, but it requires at least one CLE, since Bacillus spores that lack CwlJ and SleB exhibit Ͻ0.001% of the colony-forming ability of wild-type spores (48).…”
Section: Major Unanswered Questions About Spore Germination By Nutrientsmentioning
confidence: 99%