Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Biology and Biophysics, University of Connecticut Health Center, Farmington, Connecticut, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
This work was undertaken to obtain information on levels of metabolism in dormant spores of
Bacillus
species incubated for weeks at physiological temperatures. Spores of
Bacillus megaterium
and
Bacillus subtilis
strains were harvested shortly after release from sporangia and incubated under various conditions, and dormant spore metabolism was monitored by
31
P nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis of molecules including 3-phosphoglyceric acid (3PGA) and ribonucleotides. Incubation for up to 30 days at 4, 37, or 50°C in water, at 37 or 50°C in buffer to raise the spore core pH from ∼ 6.3 to 7.8, or at 4°C in spent sporulation medium caused no significant changes in ribonucleotide or 3PGA levels. Stage I germinated spores of
Bacillus megaterium
that had slightly increased core water content and a core pH of 7.8 also did not degrade 3PGA and accumulated no ribonucleotides, including ATP, during incubation for 8 days at 37°C in buffered saline. In contrast, spores incubated for up to 30 days at 37 or 50°C in spent sporulation medium degraded significant amounts of 3PGA and accumulated ribonucleotides, indicative of RNA degradation, and these processes were increased in
B. megaterium
spores with a core pH of ∼7.8. However, no ATP was accumulated in these spores. These data indicate that spores of
Bacillus
species stored in water or buffer at low or high temperatures exhibited minimal, if any, metabolism of endogenous compounds, even when the spore core pH was 7.8 and core water content was increased somewhat. However, there was some metabolism in spores stored in spent sporulation medium.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology