Affiliation:
1. Department of Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine
2. Department of Molecular, Microbial and Structural Biology, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut 06030
3. Department of Microbiology, College of Science, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Spores of
Clostridium perfringens
possess high heat resistance, and when these spores germinate and return to active growth, they can cause gastrointestinal disease. Work with
Bacillus subtilis
has shown that the spore's dipicolinic acid (DPA) level can markedly influence both spore germination and resistance and that the proteins encoded by the
spoVA
operon are essential for DPA uptake by the developing spore during sporulation. We now find that proteins encoded by the
spoVA
operon are also essential for the uptake of Ca
2+
and DPA into the developing spore during
C. perfringens
sporulation. Spores of a
spoVA
mutant had little, if any, Ca
2+
and DPA, and their core water content was approximately twofold higher than that of wild-type spores. These DPA-less spores did not germinate spontaneously, as DPA-less
B. subtilis
spores do. Indeed, wild-type and
spoVA C. perfringens
spores germinated similarly with a mixture of
l
-asparagine and KCl (AK), KCl alone, or a 1:1 chelate of Ca
2+
and DPA (Ca-DPA). However, the viability of
C. perfringens spoVA
spores was 20-fold lower than the viability of wild-type spores. Decoated wild-type and
spoVA
spores exhibited little, if any, germination with AK, KCl, or exogenous Ca-DPA, and their colony-forming efficiency was 10
3
- to 10
4
-fold lower than that of intact spores. However, lysozyme treatment rescued these decoated spores. Although the levels of DNA-protective α/β-type, small, acid-soluble spore proteins in
spoVA
spores were similar to those in wild-type spores,
spoVA
spores exhibited markedly lower resistance to moist heat, formaldehyde, HCl, hydrogen peroxide, nitrous acid, and UV radiation than wild-type spores did. In sum, these results suggest the following. (i) SpoVA proteins are essential for Ca-DPA uptake by developing spores during
C. perfringens
sporulation. (ii) SpoVA proteins and Ca-DPA release are not required for
C. perfringens
spore germination. (iii) A low spore core water content is essential for full resistance of
C. perfringens
spores to moist heat, UV radiation, and chemicals.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology