Water and small-molecule permeation of dormant Bacillus subtilis spores

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Abstract

We use a suspended microchannel resonator to characterize the water and small-molecule permeability of Bacillus subtilis spores based on spores' buoyant mass in different solutions. Consistent with previous results, we found that the spore coat is not a significant barrier to small molecules, and the extent to which small molecules may enter the spore is size dependent. We have developed a method to directly observe the exchange kinetics of intraspore water with deuterium oxide, and we applied this method to wild-type spores and a panel of congenic mutants with deficiencies in the assembly or structure of the coat. Compared to wild-type spores, which exchange in approximately 1 s, several coat mutant spores were found to have relatively high water permeability with exchange times below the ~200-ms temporal resolution of our assay. In addition, we found that the water permeability of the spore correlates with the ability of spores to germinate with dodecylamine and with the ability of TbCl3 to inhibit germination with L-valine. These results suggest that the structure of the coat may be necessary for maintaining low water permeability.

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Knudsen, S. M., Cermak, N., Delgado, F. F., Setlow, B., Setlow, P., & Manalis, S. R. (2016). Water and small-molecule permeation of dormant Bacillus subtilis spores. Journal of Bacteriology, 198(1), 168–177. https://doi.org/10.1128/JB.00435-15

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