Exploring the low-pressure growth limit: Evolution of Bacillus subtilis in the laboratory to enhanced growth at 5 kilopascals

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Abstract

Growth of Bacillus subtilis cells, normally adapted at Earth-normal atmospheric pressure (̃101.3 kPa), was progressively inhibited by lowering of pressure in liquid LB medium until growth essentially ceased at 2.5 kPa. Growth inhibition was immediately reversible upon return to 101.3 kPa, albeit at a slower rate. A population of B. subtilis cells was cultivated at the near-inhibitory pressure of 5 kPa for 1,000 generations, where a stepwise increase in growth was observed, as measured by the turbidity of 24-h cultures. An isolate from the 1,000- generation population was obtained that showed an increase in fitness at 5 kPa when compared to the ancestral strain or a strain obtained from a parallel population that evolved for 1,000 generations at 101.3 kPa. The results from this preliminary study have implications for understanding the ability of terrestrial microbes to grow in low-pressure environments such as Mars. © 2010, American Society for Microbiology.

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Nicholson, W. L., Fajardo-Cavazos, P., Fedenko, J., Ortíz-Lugo, J. L., Rivas-Castillo, A., Waters, S. M., & Schuerger, A. C. (2010). Exploring the low-pressure growth limit: Evolution of Bacillus subtilis in the laboratory to enhanced growth at 5 kilopascals. Applied and Environmental Microbiology, 76(22), 7559–7565. https://doi.org/10.1128/AEM.01126-10

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