Affiliation:
1. Laboratory of Food Microbiology, Wageningen University and Research Center, Wageningen,1and
2. Microbial Ingredients Section, NIZO Food Research, Ede,2 The Netherlands
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The physiological and regulatory effects of overproduction of five cold shock proteins (CSPs) of
Lactococcus lactis
were studied. CspB, CspD, and CspE could be overproduced at high levels (up to 19% of the total protein), whereas for CspA and CspC limited overproduction (0.3 to 0.5% of the total protein) was obtained. Northern blot analysis revealed low abundance of the
cspC
transcript, indicating that the stability of
cspC
mRNA is low. The limited overproduction of CspA is likely to be caused by low stability of CspA since when there was an Arg-Pro mutation at position 58, the level of CspA production increased. Using two-dimensional gel electrophoresis, it was found that upon overproduction of the CSPs several proteins, including a number of cold-induced proteins of
L. lactis
, were induced. Strikingly, upon overproduction of CspC induction of CspB, putative CspF, and putative CspG was also observed. Overproduction of CspB and overproduction of CspE result in increased survival when
L. lactis
is frozen (maximum increases, 10- and 5-fold, respectively, after 4 freeze-thaw cycles). It is concluded that in
L. lactis
CSPs play a regulatory role in the cascade of events that are initiated by cold shock treatment and that they either have a direct protective effect during freezing (e.g., RNA stabilization) or induce other factors involved in the freeze-adaptive response or both.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
32 articles.
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