Abstract

Bacterial spores are among the most resistant forms of life on Earth. Their exceptional resistance properties rely on various strategies, among them the core singular structure, organization and hydration. By using elastic incoherent neutron scattering, we probed the dynamics of Bacillus subtilis spores to determine whether core macromolecular motions at the sub-nanosecond timescale could also contribute to their resistance to physical stresses. In addition, in order to better specify the role of the various spore components, we used different mutants lacking essential structure such as the coat (PS4150 mutant), or the calcium dipicolinic acid complex (CaDPA) located in the core (FB122 mutant). PS4150 allows to better probe the core’s dynamics, as proteins of the coat represent an important part of spore proteins, and FB122 gives information about the role of the large CaDPA depot for the mobility of core’s components. We show that core’s macromolecular mobility is not particularly constrained at the sub-nanosecond timescale in spite of its low water content as some dynamical characteristics as force constants are very close to those of vegetative bacteria such as Escherichia coli or to those of fully hydrated proteins. Although the force constants of the coatless mutant are similar to the wild-type’s ones, it has lower mean square displacements (MSDs) at high Q showing that core macromolecules are somewhat more constrained than the rest of spore components. However, no behavior reflecting the glassy state regularly evoked in the literature could be drawn from our data. As hydration and macromolecules’ mobility are highly correlated, the previous assumption, that core low water content might explain spores’ exceptional resistance properties seems unlikely. Thus, we confirm recent theories, suggesting that core water is mostly as free as bulk water and proteins/macromolecules are fully hydrated. The germination of spores leads to a much less stable system with a force constant of 0.1 N/m and MSDs ~2.5 times higher at low Q than in the dormant state. DPA has also an influence on core mobility with a slightly lower force constant for the DPA-less mutant than for the wild-type, and MSDs that are ~ 1.8 times higher on average than for the wild-type at low Q. At high Q, germinated and DPA-less spores were very similar to the wild-type ones, showing that DPA and core compact structure might influence large amplitude motions rather than local dynamics of macromolecules.

Highlights

  • Bacterial spores are among the most resistant forms of life on Earth

  • First experiments using Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) or differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) showed a low mobility of bacterial spore, and a transition was identified as a potential glassy state originally attributed to the core[10,11]

  • We found some similarities with earlier DSC measurements regarding the phase transitions 12,29,30, but interestingly, the spores did not undergo the dynamical transition observed for proteins at ~240 K at the same hydration level

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Bacterial spores are among the most resistant forms of life on Earth. Their exceptional resistance properties rely on various strategies, among them the core singular structure, organization and hydration. Bacillus and Clostridia bacteria can form endospores which are metabolically inactive and they can remain in this dormant state for years Besides their ability to survive to starvation, bacterial spores are highly resistant to various stresses such as heat, radiation or toxic chemicals[1]. From the most external layers, bacterial spores (oval endospores of 1–1.5 μm diameter) are composed of an exosporium (absent in Bacillus subtilis), two proteinaceous layers called the inner and outer coat, the outer membrane and the cortex, which is mainly composed of a thick peptidoglycan structure, a cell wall, and the inner membrane, which is surrounding the protoplasm or core[1] The latter contains the genetic material, protected by chaperone proteins called small acid soluble spore proteins (SASPs), mainly involved in resistance to wet heat and ultraviolet radiations[2,4]. Incoherent neutron scattering was successfully used to characterize animal proteins[23], and whole cells[24], biological tissue[25] and biological nanoparticles[26]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call