Abstract

Both the psychrophile Aquaspirillum arcticum and the psychrotroph Bacillus psychrophilus were found to acquire thermotolerance when either heat shocked or treated with nalidixic acid; two conditions which also resulted in the induction of heat shock proteins and/or stress proteins and also cell filamentation. The possible relatedness of acquisition of thermotolerance and cell filamentation was examined by inhibiting cell filamentation with 1.5% KCl. A. arcticum cells which were heat shocked in the presence of KCl did not become filamentous nor acquire thermotolerance suggesting that these two responses may be related. On the other hand, when cells of B. psychrophilus were treated in a similar fashion, they also were prevented from cell filamentation but their ability to become thermotolerant was unaffected. When A. arcticum cells were heat shocked in the presence of chloramphenicol, heat shock protein synthesis was inhibited but not the acquistion of thermotolerance. Similar experiments with B. psychrophilus revealed that partial induction of heat shock proteins still occurred; however, no thermotolerance was exhibited.

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