Stahly, D. P. (University of Illinois, Urbana), V. R. Srinivasan, and H. Orin Halvorson. Effect of 8-azaguanine on the transition from vegetative growth to presporulation in Bacillus cereus. J. Bacteriol. 91:1875-1882. 1966.-The guanine analogue, 8-azaguanine (azaG), was found to inhibit sporulation of Bacillus cereus strain T when added to proliferating cells, but not to inhibit when added after the transition to presporulation. When azaG was added to vegetative cells, the growth rate was reduced, but no immediate bactericidal effect was demonstrated. Azaguanine was shown to be incorporated solely into ribonucleic acid (RNA). All of the natural purine bases and nucleosides were found to prevent azaG inhibition by blocking incorporation of the analogue into the RNA. Addition of a subinhibitory level of C(14)-azaG to proliferating cells resulted in an increase in incorporation paralleling the increase in number of cells. At the time of transition from growth to presporulation, a rapid removal of the azaG label from the cells occurred in the absence of net RNA breakdown. If differentiation was inhibited by increasing the concentration of azaG, then no expulsion took place. Instead, at the end of growth, net incorporation ceased, and a steady-state condition was established in which incorporation equaled breakdown. No azaG degradative enzymes are present in presporulating cells. The possibility is discussed that an increase in the ratio of natural purines to azaG occurred at the time of transition, and that the natural purine derivatives then were reincorporated into RNA preferentially to azaG. The data are consistent with the hypothesis than an increased rate of RNA turnover occurs at the time of transition from vegetative growth to presporulation. Addition of phosphate buffer (pH 7.0, 0.1 m) to azaG-inhibited vegetative cells caused reversal of inhibition, the reversal being accompanied by expulsion of the azaG. At least a partial explanation of this effect is that phosphate causes a decrease in the azaG intracellular pool size.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/jb.91.5.1875-1882.1966 | DOI Listing |
J Vis Exp
September 2016
Department of Biology, University of Massachusetts Boston;
During times of nutritional stress, Saccharomyces cerevisiae undergoes gametogenesis, known as sporulation. Diploid yeast cells that are starved for nitrogen and carbon will initiate the sporulation process. The process of sporulation includes meiosis followed by spore formation, where the haploid nuclei are packaged into environmentally resistant spores.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Proteomics
April 2015
Inserm U1085 IRSET, Université de Rennes 1, 35042 Rennes, France. Electronic address:
Unlabelled: Diploid budding yeast undergoes rapid mitosis when it ferments glucose, and in the presence of a non-fermentable carbon source and the absence of a nitrogen source it triggers sporulation. Rich medium with acetate is a commonly used pre-sporulation medium, but our understanding of the molecular events underlying the acetate-driven transition from mitosis to meiosis is still incomplete. We identified 263 proteins for which mRNA and protein synthesis are linked or uncoupled in fermenting and respiring cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFG3 (Bethesda)
August 2014
Department of Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, New York 11794-5215
Bioresour Technol
January 2014
Área de Microbiología, Departamento de Biología Funcional e IUOPA, Facultad de Medicina, Universidad de Oviedo, 33006 Oviedo, Spain.
Streptomycetes are mycelium-forming bacteria that produce two thirds of clinically relevant secondary metabolites. Secondary metabolite production is activated at specific developmental stages of Streptomyces life cycle. Despite this, Streptomyces differentiation in industrial bioreactors tends to be underestimated and the most important parameters managed are only indirectly related to differentiation: modifications to the culture media, optimization of productive strains by random or directed mutagenesis, analysis of biophysical parameters, etc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2013
Área de Microbiología, Departamento de Biología Funcional and Instituto Universitario de Biotecnología de Asturias, Universidad de Oviedo, Oviedo, Spain.
Streptomycetes are very important industrial bacteria, which produce two thirds of all clinically relevant secondary metabolites. They have a complex developmental-cycle in which an early compartmentalized mycelium (MI) differentiates to a multinucleated mycelium (MII) that grows inside the culture medium (substrate mycelium) until it starts to growth into the air (aerial mycelium) and ends up forming spores. Streptomyces developmental studies have focused mainly on the later stages of MII differentiation (aerial mycelium and sporulation), with regulation of pre-sporulation stages (MI/MII transition) essentially unknown.
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