Abstract

The use of a fluorogenic substrate, 5-octanoylaminofluorescein-di-beta-D-galactopyranoside, for beta-galactosidase has made it possible to visualize enzyme activity in individual cells of sporulating populations of Bacillus subtilis by fluorescence microscopy. lacZ fusions to different sporulation-associated genes have been used to investigate the cell compartmentalization of gene expression during sporulation. A strain with a lacZ fusion to sspA, a gene which is transcribed by E-sigma G at a late stage of sporulation, displayed predominantly compartment-specific fluorescence. Expression of the early-expressed spoIIA locus, which includes the structural gene for sigma F, was seen not to be compartmentalized. Populations of strains with lacZ fusions to gpr and dacF, genes which are transcribed by E-sigma F at intermediate stages of sporulation, included some organisms showing uncompartmentalized fluorescence and others showing compartment-specific fluorescence; the proportion showing compartment-specific fluorescence increased in samples taken later in sporulation. Several possible explanations of the results obtained with gpr and dacF are considered. A plausible interpretation is that sigma F activity is initially not compartmentalized and becomes compartmentalized as sporulation progresses. The progression to compartmentalization does not require the activities of the sporulation-specific factor sigma E or sigma G but may require some product of sigma F activity.

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