Abstract
Azotobacter vinelandii cells required 0.5 mM calcium in the iron-limited competence induction medium. This requirement also was fulfilled by strontium, but not by magnesium. Cells pregrown in competence medium lacking calcium rapidly recovered competence with the addition of 0.5 mM calcium, provided they were suspended in the growth supernatant. A 60,000-dalton glycoprotein (pI 5.10) present in competent or incompetent culture supernatants participated in calcium-mediated competence recovery. Cells grown in calcium-limited medium appeared to have leaky cell envelopes and released a diverse array of proteins into the culture supernatant and into distilled water washes of the cells, seven of which appeared to be more dominant in competent cells. Two distilled water washes of cells grown in calcium-limited medium did not prevent calcium-mediated recovery of competence in the culture supernatant. Four to six distilled water washes removed a competence-specific protein (pI 5.19) and prevented calcium-mediated recovery of competence in the culture supernatant.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
23 articles.
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