Litcius/Paper detail

Killing of bacterial spores by dodecylamine and its effects on spore inner membrane properties

S. Mokashi, Julia Kanaan, D. Levi Craft, Brandon A. Byrd, Blesing Zenick, Michael Laue, George Korza, Wendy W. K. Mok, Peter Setlow

2020Journal of Applied Microbiology32 citationsDOI

Abstract

AIMS: The objective of this study was to determine the effects of Ca-dipicolinic acid (CaDPA), cortex-lytic enzymes (CLEs), the inner membrane (IM) CaDPA channel and coat on spore killing by dodecylamine. METHODS AND RESULTS: . Dodecylamine killing of decoated wild type and CLE-less B. subtilis spores was similar, but ~twofold faster than for intact spores, and much faster for decoated CaDPA-less spores, with ≥99% killing in 5 min. Propidium iodide stained intact spores ± CaDPA minimally, decoated CaDPA-replete spores or dodecylamine-killed CLE-less spores peripherally, and cores of decoated CaDPA-less spores and dodecylamine-killed intact spores with CLEs. The IM of some decoated CaDPA-less spores was greatly reorganized. CONCLUSIONS: Dodecylamine spore killing does not require CaDPA channels, CaDPA or CLEs. The lack of CaDPA in decoated spores allowed strong PI staining of the spore core, indicating loss of these spores IM permeability barrier. SIGNIFICANCE AND IMPACT OF THE STUDY: This work gives new information on killing bacterial spores by dodecylamine, and how spore IM's relative impermeability is maintained.

Topics & Concepts

SporeBacillus subtilisEndosporeStainingBacterial sporeMicrobiologyDipicolinic acidPropidium iodideGerminationChemistryBiologyBacteriaBiochemistryBotanyProgrammed cell deathApoptosisGeneticsBacterial Genetics and BiotechnologyBacterial Infections and VaccinesIon channel regulation and function