Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and School of Oceanography, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon 97331-3804
Abstract
Levels of DNA, RNA, protein, ATP, glutathione, and radioactivity associated with [
35
S]methionine-labeled cellular protein were estimated at various times during the starvation-survival process of a marine psychrophilic heterotrophic
Vibrio
sp., Ant-300. Values for the macromolecules were analyzed in terms of total, viable, and respiring cells. Electron micrographs (thin sections) were made on log-phase and 5.5-week-starved cells. On a per-cell basis, the levels of protein and DNA rapidly decreased until a constant level was attained. A second method in which radioactive sulfur was used for monitoring protein demonstrated that the cellular protein level decreased for approximately 2.5 weeks and then remained constant. An initial decrease in the RNA level with starvation was noted, but with time the RNA (orcinol-positive material) level increased to 2.5 times the minimum level. After 6 weeks of starvation, 45 to 60% of the cells remained capable of respiration, as determined by iodonitrotetrazolium violet-formazan granule production. Potential respiration and endogenous respiration levels fell, with an intervening 1-week peak, until at 2 weeks no endogenous respiration could be measured; respiratory potential remained high. The cell glutathione level fell during starvation, but when the cells were starved in the presence of the appropriate amino acids, glutathione was resynthesized to its original level, beginning after 1 week of starvation. The cells used much of their stored products and became ultramicrocells during the 6-week starvation-survival process. Ant-300 underwent many physiological changes in the first week of starvation that relate to the utilization or production of ATP. After that period, a stable pattern for long-term starvation was demonstrated.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Reference37 articles.
1. Dissolved organic carbon from deep waters resists microbial oxidation;Barber R. T.;Nature (London),1968
2. Baross J. A. F. J. Hanus and R. Y. Morita. 1974. The effects of hydrostatic pressure on uracil uptake ribonucleic acid synthesis and growth of three obligately psychrophilic marine vibrios Vibrio alginolyticus and Escherichia coli p. 180-202. In R. R. Colwell and R. Y. Morita (ed.) Effect of the ocean environment on microbial activities. University Park Press Baltimore.
3. Studies on a mutant of Escherichia coli with unbalanced ribonucleic acid synthesis. II. The concomitance of ribonucleic acid synthesis with resumed protein synthesis;Borek E.;J. Bacteriol.,1958
4. Intracellular substrates for endogenous metabolism during long-term starvation of rod and spherical stage cells of Arthrobacter crystallopoietes;Boylen C. W.;J. Bacteriol.,1970
5. A study of the conditions and mechanism of the diphenylamine reaction for the colorimetric estimation of deoxyribonucleic acid;Burton K.;Biochem. J.,1956
Cited by
104 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献