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Chemical and Morphological Studies of Bacterial Spore Formation : II. Spore and Parasporal Protein Formation in Bacillus cereus var. Alesti

The development of both the spore and parasporal protein crystal of Bacillus cereus var. alesti was followed using chemical and cytological techniques. The changes which led to the formation of the fore-spore were similar to those already described for Bacillus cereus. However, adjacent to the devel...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Young, I. Elizabeth, Fitz-James, Philip C.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Rockefeller University Press 1959
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2224684/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13846631
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author Young, I. Elizabeth
Fitz-James, Philip C.
author_facet Young, I. Elizabeth
Fitz-James, Philip C.
author_sort Young, I. Elizabeth
collection PubMed
description The development of both the spore and parasporal protein crystal of Bacillus cereus var. alesti was followed using chemical and cytological techniques. The changes which led to the formation of the fore-spore were similar to those already described for Bacillus cereus. However, adjacent to the developing fore-spore a small inclusion became discernible in phase contrast. This protein inclusion during its growth was differentiated from the chromatin and lipid-containing inclusions by sequential staining techniques. During spore and crystal formation no net synthesis of either nucleic acid was detected. Tracer studies with radioactive phosphorus confirmed that the spore chromatin was derived from that in the vegetative cell. These same studies also indicated that a turnover of ribonucleic acid occurred during the sporulation process. During their formation both the spore and crystal incorporated methionine-(35)S from the medium and from cellular material into a bound form. Sequential extractions with alkali and with alkaline-thioglycollate reagent revealed that the solubility characteristics of the mature crystal were possibly related to the presence of intermolecular disulphide bonds which developed after the major synthesis of the crystal was complete. The synthetic nature of sporogenesis and crystal formation is discussed with reference to the concept of "endotrophic" sporulation.
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spelling pubmed-22246842008-05-01 Chemical and Morphological Studies of Bacterial Spore Formation : II. Spore and Parasporal Protein Formation in Bacillus cereus var. Alesti Young, I. Elizabeth Fitz-James, Philip C. J Biophys Biochem Cytol Article The development of both the spore and parasporal protein crystal of Bacillus cereus var. alesti was followed using chemical and cytological techniques. The changes which led to the formation of the fore-spore were similar to those already described for Bacillus cereus. However, adjacent to the developing fore-spore a small inclusion became discernible in phase contrast. This protein inclusion during its growth was differentiated from the chromatin and lipid-containing inclusions by sequential staining techniques. During spore and crystal formation no net synthesis of either nucleic acid was detected. Tracer studies with radioactive phosphorus confirmed that the spore chromatin was derived from that in the vegetative cell. These same studies also indicated that a turnover of ribonucleic acid occurred during the sporulation process. During their formation both the spore and crystal incorporated methionine-(35)S from the medium and from cellular material into a bound form. Sequential extractions with alkali and with alkaline-thioglycollate reagent revealed that the solubility characteristics of the mature crystal were possibly related to the presence of intermolecular disulphide bonds which developed after the major synthesis of the crystal was complete. The synthetic nature of sporogenesis and crystal formation is discussed with reference to the concept of "endotrophic" sporulation. The Rockefeller University Press 1959-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC2224684/ /pubmed/13846631 Text en Copyright © Copyright, 1959, by The Rockefeller Institute
spellingShingle Article
Young, I. Elizabeth
Fitz-James, Philip C.
Chemical and Morphological Studies of Bacterial Spore Formation : II. Spore and Parasporal Protein Formation in Bacillus cereus var. Alesti
title Chemical and Morphological Studies of Bacterial Spore Formation : II. Spore and Parasporal Protein Formation in Bacillus cereus var. Alesti
title_full Chemical and Morphological Studies of Bacterial Spore Formation : II. Spore and Parasporal Protein Formation in Bacillus cereus var. Alesti
title_fullStr Chemical and Morphological Studies of Bacterial Spore Formation : II. Spore and Parasporal Protein Formation in Bacillus cereus var. Alesti
title_full_unstemmed Chemical and Morphological Studies of Bacterial Spore Formation : II. Spore and Parasporal Protein Formation in Bacillus cereus var. Alesti
title_short Chemical and Morphological Studies of Bacterial Spore Formation : II. Spore and Parasporal Protein Formation in Bacillus cereus var. Alesti
title_sort chemical and morphological studies of bacterial spore formation : ii. spore and parasporal protein formation in bacillus cereus var. alesti
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2224684/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/13846631
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