Affiliation:
1. Department of Food Hygiene and Environmental Health, Centre of Excellence in Microbial Food Safety Research, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Clostridium botulinum
produces heat-resistant endospores that may germinate and outgrow into neurotoxic cultures in foods. Sporulation is regulated by the transcription factor Spo0A and the alternative sigma factors SigF, SigE, SigG, and SigK in most spore formers studied to date. We constructed mutants of
sigF
,
sigE
, and
sigG
in
C. botulinum
ATCC 3502 and used quantitative reverse transcriptase PCR and electron microscopy to assess their expression of the sporulation pathway on transcriptional and morphological levels. In all three mutants the expression of
spo0A
was disrupted. The
sigF
and
sigE
mutants failed to induce
sigG
and
sigK
beyond exponential-phase levels and halted sporulation during asymmetric cell division. In the
sigG
mutant, peak transcription of
sigE
was delayed and
sigK
levels remained lower than that in the parent strain. The
sigG
mutant forespore was engulfed by the mother cell and possessed a spore coat but no peptidoglycan cortex. The findings suggest that SigF and SigE of
C. botulinum
ATCC 3502 are essential for early sporulation and late-stage induction of
sigK
, whereas SigG is essential for spore cortex formation but not for coat formation, as opposed to previous observations in
B. subtilis sigG
mutants. Our findings add to a growing body of evidence that regulation of sporulation in
C. botulinum
ATCC 3502, and among the clostridia, differs from the
B. subtilis
model.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
Cited by
23 articles.
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