Abstract
Salt stress significantly impedes high cell-density culture by suppressing the reproductive capacity of lactic acid bacteria. This study examined the effects of salt stress conditions (2% w/v NaCl) on Lactobacillus bulgaricus sp1.1. Although DNA replication and division ring localization remained unaffected, the down-regulation of the ftsZ and dnaA genes inhibited division ring assembly. Consequently, bacteria exhibited filamentation, increased cell length, and accumulated chromosomes and division rings, which obstructed cell division. Under salt stress, sp1.1 experienced several transcriptional changes. The serine/threonine kinase gene was identified as a significant regulator of bacterial division under salt stress. Exogenous addition of serine and threonine could stimulate the expression of Ser/Thr kinase gene, promote the assembly of division ring, and enhance the dividing ability of the bacterium, which led to a density of 7.93 log CFU/mL under the salt stress, which was 6.92 times higher than that of the untreated group. This study provides a new perspective for high-density cultivation of lactic acid bacteria.
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