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Appl. Environ. Microbiol., Mar 1995, 868-871, Vol 61, No. 3
A Gehin, E Gelhaye, G Raval and H Petitdemange
Depending on the moment of cellobiose starvation, Clostridium
cellulolyticum cells behave in different ways. Cells starved during the
exponential phase of growth sporulate at 30%, whereas exhaustion of the
carbon substrate at the beginning of growth does not provoke cell
sporulation. Growth in the presence of excess cellobiose generates 3%
spores. The response of C. cellulolyticum to carbon starvation involves
changes in proteolytic activities; higher activities (20% protein
degradation) corresponded to a higher level of sporulation; lower
proteolysis (5%) was observed in cells starved during the beginning of
exponential growth, when sporulation was not observed; with an excess of
cellobiose, an intermediate value (10%), accompanied by a low level of
sporulation, was observed in cells taken at the end of the exponential
growth phase. The basal percentage of the protein breakdown in nonstarved
culture was 4%. Cells lacking proteolytic activities failed to induce
sporulation. High concentrations of cellobiose repressed proteolytic
activities and sporulation. The onset of carbon starvation during the
growth phase affected the survival response of C. cellulolyticum via the
sporulation process and also via cell-cellulose interaction. Cells from the
exponential growth phase were more adhesive to filter paper than cells from
the stationary growth phase but less than cells from the late stationary
growth phase.
Copyright © 1995, American Society for Microbiology
Clostridium cellulolyticum Viability and Sporulation under Cellobiose Starvation Conditions
Laboratoire de Chimie Biologique I, Universite de Nancy I, 54506 Vandoeuvre-les-Nancy Cedex, France
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