The highly radiation-resistant tetracoccal bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans exhibited a reversible multicell-form transition which depended on the NaCl concentration in the medium. In response to 0.8% NaCl addition into the medium, the pair/tetrad (designated 2/4) cells in a young culture grew and divided but did not separate and became 8-, 16-, and 32-cell units successively. In exponential growth phase, the cells divided in a 16/32 pattern. Potassium ions were equally effective as Na+ in mediating this multicell-formation effect; Mg2+, Li+, and Ca2+ also worked but produced less multiplicity. This effect appears to be species specific. Thin-section micrographs revealed that in a 16/32-cell unit, eight 2/4 cells were encased in an orderly manner within a large peripheral wall, showing five cycles of septation. Our results suggest the presence of a salt-sensitive mechanism for controlling cell separation in D. radiodurans.
CITATION STYLE
Chou, F. I., & Tan, S. T. (1991). Salt-mediated multicell formation in Deinococcus radiodurans. Journal of Bacteriology, 173(10), 3184–3190. https://doi.org/10.1128/jb.173.10.3184-3190.1991
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