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Showing papers in "Archives of Microbiology in 2011"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The unique combination of genomic features of the German outbreak strain, containing characteristics from pathotypes EAEC and EHEC, suggested that it represents a new pathotype Entero-Aggregative-Haemorrhagic Escherichiacoli (EAHEC).
Abstract: The genome sequences of two Escherichia coli O104:H4 strains derived from two different patients of the 2011 German E. coli outbreak were determined. The two analyzed strains were designated E. coli GOS1 and GOS2 (German outbreak strain). Both isolates comprise one chromosome of approximately 5.31 Mbp and two putative plasmids. Comparisons of the 5,217 (GOS1) and 5,224 (GOS2) predicted protein-encoding genes with various E. coli strains, and a multilocus sequence typing analysis revealed that the isolates were most similar to the entero-aggregative E. coli (EAEC) strain 55989. In addition, one of the putative plasmids of the outbreak strain is similar to pAA-type plasmids of EAEC strains, which contain aggregative adhesion fimbrial operons. The second putative plasmid harbors genes for extended-spectrum β-lactamases. This type of plasmid is widely distributed in pathogenic E. coli strains. A significant difference of the E. coli GOS1 and GOS2 genomes to those of EAEC strains is the presence of a prophage encoding the Shiga toxin, which is characteristic for enterohemorrhagic E. coli (EHEC) strains. The unique combination of genomic features of the German outbreak strain, containing characteristics from pathotypes EAEC and EHEC, suggested that it represents a new pathotype Entero-Aggregative-Haemorrhagic E scherichia c oli (EAHEC).

278 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Nitrogen (N) is among the most important macro-nutrients significantly affecting plant growth and yield production and must not be overfertilized with respect to the economical and environmental points of view.
Abstract: Nitrogen (N) is among the most important macro-nutrients significantly affecting plant growth and yield production. Accordingly, N must be supplied adequately so that optimum amounts of yield are resulted. There are different ways of supplying N to the plant including the use of chemical and biological fertilization. The chemical properties of N make it very mobile, especially under humid conditions. Hence, N must not be overfertilized with respect to the economical and environmental points of view. N Biological fertilization includes the use of plant growth-promoting rhizobacteria (PGPR) including the N-fixing bacteria, rhizobium. There are also arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) fungi in the soil, which are symbiotic to most terrestrial plants enhancing plant growth and yield production through increasing the uptake of water and nutrients by the host plant. Numerous experiments have indicated the important role of AM fungi in enhancing P uptake by plant. However, it is yet a matter of debate that how AM fungi may affect soil N dynamic and hence plant N uptake. Some of the most important and recent aspects regarding such effects by AM fungi are highlighted, which can be of significance to health and productivity of the ecosystem.

137 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that under iron limiting conditions different strains of A. brasilense produce siderophores, exhibiting different yields and rates of production according to their origin, suggesting that some strains of C. acutatum could act as biocontrol agent preventing anthracnose disease in strawberry.
Abstract: Anthracnose, caused by the fungus Colletotrichum acutatum is one of the most important diseases in strawberry crop. Due to environmental pollution and resistance produced by chemical fungicides, nowadays biological control is considered a good alternative for crop protection. Among biocontrol agents, there are plant growth-promoting bacteria, such as members of the genus Azospirillum. In this work, we demonstrate that under iron limiting conditions different strains of A. brasilense produce siderophores, exhibiting different yields and rates of production according to their origin. Chemical assays revealed that strains REC2 and REC3 secrete catechol type siderophores, including salicylic acid, detected by thin layer chromatography coupled with fluorescence spectroscopy and gas chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis. Siderophores produced by them showed in vitro antifungal activity against C. acutatum M11. Furthermore, this latter coincided with results obtained from phytopathological tests performed in planta, where a reduction of anthracnose symptoms on strawberry plants previously inoculated with A. brasilense was observed. These outcomes suggest that some strains of A. brasilense could act as biocontrol agent preventing anthracnose disease in strawberry.

136 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this review, the possible factors that may be exchanged and the methods of exchange are discussed.
Abstract: Probiotics are live cultures, usually lactic acid bacteria, which are ingested to promote a healthy gastrointestinal tract. These organisms require certain traits to survive and compete in this niche, but these traits may be transferred to other microbiota in the gastrointestinal tract (GIT). Similarly, virulence factors from pathogens may be acquired by probiotic strains. Bacteria have developed a plethora of methods to transfer genetic material between strains, species and genera. In this review, the possible factors that may be exchanged and the methods of exchange are discussed.

133 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The psychrotrophic Pseudomonad strains could effectively provide a promising solution to overcome cold stress, which is major factor hindering wheat productivity under cold climatic condition.
Abstract: Twelve psychrotolerant Pseudomonad strains were selected on the basis of various plant growth-promoting (PGP) activities at cold temperature (4°C). The effect of inoculation with Pseudomonad strains on cold alleviation and growth of wheat seedling at cold temperature (8°C) was investigated under greenhouse condition. Inoculation with Pseudomonad strains significantly enhanced root/shoot biomass and nutrients uptake as compared to non-bacterized control at 60 days of plant growth. Bacterization significantly improved the level of cellular metabolites like chlorophyll, anthocyanin, free proline, total phenolics, starch content, physiologically available iron, proteins, and amino acids that are sign of alleviation of cold stress in wheat plants. Increased relative water content, reduced membrane injury (electrolyte leakage), and Na+/K+ ratio were also recorded in bacterized wheat plants. Electrolyte leakage and Na+/K+ were found inversely proportional to plant growth at cold temperature. Statistical analysis of twenty-three measured parameters revealed that uninoculated control was under cold stress while eight bacterial strains were positively alleviating cold stress in wheat plants. Thus, the psychrotrophic Pseudomonad strains could effectively provide a promising solution to overcome cold stress, which is major factor hindering wheat productivity under cold climatic condition.

120 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study established a robust model of desiccation tolerance in which S. aureus has the ability to survive on dry plastic surfaces for more than 1,097 days and identified several components involved in the process.
Abstract: Staphylococcus aureus is a multidrug-resistant pathogen that not only causes a diverse array of human diseases, but also is able to survive in potentially dry and stressful environments, such as the human nose, on skin and on inanimate surfaces such as clothing and surfaces. This study investigated parameters governing desiccation tolerance of S. aureus and identified several components involved in the process. Initially, the role of environmental parameters such as temperature, growth phase, cell density, desiccation time and protectants in desiccation tolerance were determined. This established a robust model of desiccation tolerance in which S. aureus has the ability to survive on dry plastic surfaces for more than 1,097 days. Using a combination of a random screen and defined mutants, clpX, sigB and yjbH were identified as being required for desiccation tolerance. ClpX is a part of the ATP-dependent ClpXP protease, important for protein turnover, and YjbH has a proposed linked function. SigB is an accessory sigma factor with a role in generalized stress resistance. Understanding the molecular mechanisms that govern desiccation tolerance may determine the break points to be exploited to prevent the spread of this dangerous pathogen in hospitals and communities.

117 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This review specifically describes mer operon and its generic molecular mechanism with reference to the central role played by merA gene and its related gene products for substantial detoxification of mercurial compounds.
Abstract: Mercury pollution has emerged as a major problem in industrialized zones and presents a serious threat to environment and health of local communities. Effectiveness and wide distribution of mer operon by horizontal and vertical gene transfer in its various forms among large community of microbe reflect importance and compatibility of this mechanism in nature. This review specifically describes mer operon and its generic molecular mechanism with reference to the central role played by merA gene and its related gene products. The combinatorial action of merA and merB together maintains broad spectrum mercury detoxification system for substantial detoxification of mercurial compounds. Feasibility of mer operon to coexist with antibiotic resistance gene (ampr, kanr, tetr) clusters enables extensive adaptation of bacterial species to adverse environment. Flexibility of the mer genes to exist as intricate part of chromosome, plasmids, transposons, and integrons enables high distribution of these genes in wider microbial gene pool. Unique ability of this system to manipulate oligodynamic property of mercurial compounds for volatilization of mercuric ions (Hg2+) makes it possible for a wide range of microbes to tolerate mercury-mediated toxicity.

112 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Large populations of culturable endophytic bacteria were detected in stems and roots of wild plants colonizing rocks in the southern Sonoran Desert, but not in seeds, and In vitro tests indicated that Azotobacter vinelandii M2Per is a potent nitrogen fixer.
Abstract: The small cactus Mammillaria fraileana is a pioneer rock-colonizing plant harboring endophytic bacteria with the potential for nitrogen fixation and rock weathering (phosphate solubilization and rock degradation). In seeds, only a combination of culture-independent methods, such as fluorescence in situ hybridization, scanning electron microscopy, and fluorescence vital staining, detected significant amounts of non-culturable, but living, endophytic bacteria distributed underneath the membrane covering the embryo, in the undifferentiated tissue of the embryo, and in the vascular tissue. Large populations of culturable endophytic bacteria were detected in stems and roots of wild plants colonizing rocks in the southern Sonoran Desert, but not in seeds. Among 14 endophytic bacterial isolates found in roots, four isolates were identified by full sequencing of their 16S rRNA gene. In vitro tests indicated that Azotobacter vinelandii M2Per is a potent nitrogen fixer. Solubilization of inorganic phosphate was exhibited by Pseudomonas putida M5TSA, Enterobacter sakazakii M2PFe, and Bacillus megaterium M1PCa, while A. vinelandii M2Per, P. putida M5TSA, and B. megaterium M1PCa weathered rock by reducing the size of rock particles, probably by changing the pH of the liquid media. Cultivated seedlings of M. fraileana, derived from disinfected seeds and inoculated with endophytic bacteria, showed re-colonization 105 days after inoculation. Their densities decreased from the root toward the stem and apical zones. Functional traits in planta of culturable and non-culturable endophytic bacteria in seeds remain unknown.

91 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The influence of specific factors including the presence of a background microbiota, growth temperature, moisture and strain motility upon persistence in this environment, and a direct correlation between motility and survival of L. monocytogenes in soil with highly motile L.monocytogens exhibiting greater soil survival than non-motile mutants are demonstrated.
Abstract: We investigated the ability of several strains of L. monocytogenes and Listeria innocua strains to survive in local soil samples in vitro. Survival of three L. monocytogenes strains, EGDe, CD83, and CD1038, and three L. innocua strains, CLIP, FH2117, FH2152, was monitored in soil samples by direct enumeration of colony-forming units on selective agar. The study did not demonstrate any species-specific difference in soil survival, and all Listeria strains exhibited a marked decline in numbers over time. Bioluminescence imaging approaches to detect lux-tagged strains in soil proved largely ineffective, most likely due to the reduced metabolic activity of strains in this environment. We investigated the influence of specific factors including the presence of a background microbiota, growth temperature, moisture and strain motility upon persistence in this environment. A sequenced L. monocytogenes strain, EGDe, was capable of active growth in sterile soil yet exhibited a decline in the presence of the normal soil microbiota. Furthermore, greater survival was seen at lower incubation temperatures in normal soil. Finally, we demonstrated a direct correlation between motility and survival of L. monocytogenes in soil with highly motile L. monocytogenes strains exhibiting greater soil survival than non-motile mutants.

71 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A proteogenomic investigation was performed to elucidate the initial activation reaction of anaerobic naphthalene degradation, leading to the identification of an alpha-subunit of a carboxylase protein that was two-fold up-regulated in naphthaene-grown cells compared to 2-methylnaphthalenes-grown Cells.
Abstract: The sulfate-reducing highly enriched culture N47 is capable to anaerobically degrade naphthalene, 2-methylnaphthalene, and 2-naphthoic acid. A proteogenomic investigation was performed to elucidate the initial activation reaction of anaerobic naphthalene degradation. This lead to the identification of an alpha-subunit of a carboxylase protein that was two-fold up-regulated in naphthalene-grown cells compared to 2-methylnaphthalene-grown cells. The putative naphthalene carboxylase subunit showed 48% similarity to the anaerobic benzene carboxylase from an iron-reducing, benzene-degrading culture and 45% to alpha-subunit of phenylphosphate carboxylase of Aromatoleum aromaticum EbN1. A gene for the beta-subunit of putative naphthalene carboxylase was located nearby on the genome and was expressed with naphthalene. Similar to anaerobic benzene carboxylase, there were no genes for gamma- and delta-subunits of a putative carboxylase protein located on the genome which excludes participation in degradation of phenolic compounds. The genes identified for putative naphthalene carboxylase subunits showed only weak similarity to 4-hydroxybenzoate decarboxylase excluding ATP-independent carboxylation. Several ORFs were identified that possibly encode a 2-naphthoate-CoA ligase, which is obligate for activation before the subsequent ring reduction by naphthoyl-CoA reductase. One of these ligases was exclusively expressed on naphthalene and 2-naphthoic acid and might be the responsible naphthoate-CoA-ligase.

67 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The development of a general classification scheme for plasmids from all microbial lineages will ensure a systematic assessment of the upcoming data flood and help to understand the distribution of extrachromosomal elements.
Abstract: Whole genome sequences are present-day bonanzas for taxonomists. Comparative genomics provides a promising perspective to reveal the evolutionary relationship between organisms, but this strategy is not applicable for extrachromosomal elements due to their high recombination frequencies. Classification of plasmids is based on their compatibility, i.e., the ability to coexist within the same cell. Compatibility testing is a laborious experimental discipline of pairwise comparisons developed for a small set of replicons. Thus, novel approaches are urgently required to deal with the exponentially increasing amount of sequence data. In this minireview, a short overview about the functional role and distribution of plasmids as well as a summary of recent strategies to classify the replicons via phylogenetic analyses is given. Our own work essentially bases on genes of the replication module, i.e., the replicase and two conserved partitioning genes and we exemplified this approach for the four different plasmid types from Alphaproteobacteria. It is suitable for a reliable classification of these replicons and allows in silico predictions about their compatibility. The development of a general classification scheme for plasmids from all microbial lineages will ensure a systematic assessment of the upcoming data flood and help to understand the distribution of extrachromosomal elements.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Using comparative genomics, it can be concluded that desferrioxamine biosynthesis is ancestral within the genera Erwinia and Pantoea.
Abstract: Genomics has clarified the biosynthetic pathway for desferrioxamine E critical for iron acquisition in the enterobacterial fire blight pathogen Erwinia amylovora. Evidence for each of the individual steps and the role of desferrioxamine E biosynthesis in pathogen virulence and cell protection from host defenses is presented. Using comparative genomics, it can be concluded that desferrioxamine biosynthesis is ancestral within the genera Erwinia and Pantoea.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The isolates from Puna, northwestern Argentina and the ability to produce phosphate solubilization, alkaline phosphatase, siderophores, and indole acetic acid appear attractive for exploring their plant growth-promoting activity and potential field application.
Abstract: The ability of soil microorganisms to solubilize phosphate is an important trait of plant growth-promoting bacteria leading to increased yields and smaller use of fertilizers. This study presents the isolation and characterization of phosphobacteria from Puna, northwestern Argentina and the ability to produce phosphate solubilization, alkaline phosphatase, siderophores, and indole acetic acid. The P-solubilizing activity was coincidental with a decrease in pH values of the tricalcium phosphate medium for all strains after 72 h of incubation. All the isolates showed the capacity to produce siderophores and indoles. Identification by 16S rDNA sequencing and phylogenetic analysis revealed that these strains belong to the genera Pantoea, Serratia, Enterobacter, and Pseudomonas. These isolates appear attractive for exploring their plant growth-promoting activity and potential field application.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results verified that Aph.
Abstract: Although the synergetic interactions between chemolithoautotroph Acidithiobacillus ferrooxidans and heterotroph Acidiphilium acidophilum have drawn a share of attention, the influence of Aph. acidophilum on growth and metabolic functions of At. ferrooxidans is still unknown on transcriptional level. To assess this influence, a co-culture composed by At. ferrooxidans and Aph. acidophilum was successfully acclimated in this study. Depending on the growth dynamics, At. ferrooxidans in co-culture had 2 days longer exponential phase and 5 times more cell number than that in pure culture. The ferrous iron concentration in culture medium and the expression of iron oxidation–related genes revealed that the energy acquisition of At. ferrooxidans in co-culture was more efficient than that in pure culture. Besides, the analysis of CO2 fixation–related genes in At. ferrooxidans indicated that the second copy of RuBisCO-encoding genes cbbLS-2 and the positive regulator–encoding gene cbbR were up-regulated in co-culture system. All of these results verified that Aph. acidophilum could heterotrophically grow with At. ferrooxidans and promote the growth of it. By means of activating iron oxidation–related genes and the second set of cbbLS genes in At. ferrooxidans, the Aph. acidophilum facilitated the iron oxidation and CO2 fixation by At. ferrooxidans.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: JD2 functioned as a “helper” bacterium to enhance the performance of rhizobial inoculant strains during inoculation of alfalfa and clover in the absence of Cr(VI) and showed free-living nitrogen-fixing activity possibly attributable to a V-nitrogenase.
Abstract: A chromium (Cr)-resistant bacterium isolated from soil containing 6,000 mg/kg of Cr was identified based on 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis as Delftia, and designated as JD2. Growth of JD2 was accompanied with reduction of Cr(VI) to Cr(III) in liquid medium initially containing 100 mg/L Cr(VI), the maximum concentration allowing growth. JD2 showed NADH/NADPH-dependent reductase activity associated with the soluble fraction of cells. The results suggest that JD2 might be a good candidate for the treatment of highly Cr(VI)-contaminated water and/or industrial effluents. The isolate produced indole-3-acetic acid in the presence and absence of Cr(VI) and showed free-living nitrogen-fixing activity possibly attributable to a V-nitrogenase. JD2 did not counteract the harmful effect of Cr(VI) during leguminous plant growth and nodulation by rhizobial strains but functioned as a "helper" bacterium to enhance the performance of rhizobial inoculant strains during inoculation of alfalfa and clover (used as model plants to study plant growth-promoting activity) in the absence of Cr(VI).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In-silico analysis of 195 fully sequenced, acdS-containing bacterial genomes revealed that the majority of strains, including numerous strains belonging to the genus Pseudomonas, do not contain an acdR regulatory gene in the vicinity of the acdD gene or elsewhere in the genome.
Abstract: Deamination of the ethylene precursor 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylic acid (ACC) is a key plant-beneficial trait found in many plant growth-promoting bacteria. In this study, we analysed ACC deaminase genes (acdS) of bacterial endophytes colonizing field-grown potato plants. PCR analysis revealed the presence of two types of acdS genes, the dominant one showing high homology to an acdS gene derived from Pseudomonas fluorescens. Construction, functional screening and sequence analysis of metagenomic libraries revealed clones containing the acdS gene identified in the PCR library. Sequence analysis of one metagenomic clone identified the entire acdS operon of an uncultivated endophyte and revealed that the acdS gene is coupled upstream with an acdR transcriptional regulator gene as previously found in P. putida strain UW4 (Grichko and Glick 2000). However, in-silico analysis of 195 fully sequenced, acdS-containing bacterial genomes revealed that the majority of strains, including numerous strains belonging to the genus Pseudomonas, do not contain an acdR regulatory gene in the vicinity of the acdS gene or elsewhere in the genome. The acdR+–acdS+ operon was exclusively found in several Alpha- and Betaproteobacteria most prominently in the genus Burkholderia.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This is the first study demonstrating that the expression of T6SS is precisely regulated by temperature, growth phase, and AHL-dependent quorum sensing systems in Y. pseudotuberculosis.
Abstract: The type VI secretion system (T6SS) is a novel secretion system found in many Gram-negative bacterial pathogens, which appears to be tightly regulated by different regulatory mechanisms. In the present study, we identified 4 T6SS clusters in Yersinia pseudotuberculosis and demonstrated that they were differentially thermoregulated. Among them, T6SS4 was preferentially expressed at 26°C, and its expression was growth phase dependent and subject to quorum sensing regulation. Both YpsI and YtbI AHL synthases contributed to the positive regulation of T6SS4, whereas YpsI synthase played the major role as T6SS4 expression was reduced strongly in the ypsI mutant strain but weakly in the ytbI mutant strain. Moreover, we provided evidence that exogenous addition of different synthetic AHLs complemented T6SS4 expression in different efficiencies in an ypsIytbI double mutant strain, suggesting C6-HSL had an antagonistic effect on T6SS4 expression. This is the first study demonstrating that the expression of T6SS is precisely regulated by temperature, growth phase, and AHL-dependent quorum sensing systems in Y. pseudotuberculosis.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that hydrogenase-dependent reduction of BV requires the small subunit, and plasmids encoding Strep-tagged derivatives of the large subunits of the three E. coli [NiFe]-hydrogenases restored activity of the respective hydrogenase to strain FTD147, which carries in-frame deletions in the hyaB, hybC, and hycE genes encoding the largeSubunits of Hyd-1, Hyd-2, and Hyd-
Abstract: Escherichia coli can both oxidize hydrogen and reduce protons. These activities involve three distinct [NiFe]-hydrogenases, termed Hyd-1, Hyd-2, and Hyd-3, each minimally comprising heterodimers of a large subunit, containing the [NiFe] active site, and a small subunit, bearing iron–sulfur clusters. Dihydrogen-oxidizing activity can be determined using redox dyes like benzyl viologen (BV); however, it is unclear whether electron transfer to BV occurs directly at the active site, or via an iron–sulfur center in the small subunit. Plasmids encoding Strep-tagged derivatives of the large subunits of the three E. coli [NiFe]-hydrogenases restored activity of the respective hydrogenase to strain FTD147, which carries in-frame deletions in the hyaB, hybC, and hycE genes encoding the large subunits of Hyd-1, Hyd-2, and Hyd-3, respectively. Purified Strep-HyaB was associated with the Hyd-1 small subunit (HyaA), and purified Strep-HybC was associated with the Hyd-2 small subunit (HybO), and a second iron–sulfur protein, HybA. However, Strep-HybC isolated from a hybO mutant had no other associated subunits and lacked BV-dependent hydrogenase activity. Mutants deleted separately for hyaA, hybO, or hycG (Hyd-3 small subunit) lacked BV-linked hydrogenase activity, despite the Hyd-1 and Hyd-2 large subunits being processed. These findings demonstrate that hydrogenase-dependent reduction of BV requires the small subunit.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Rhodobacter sphaeroides ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO)-deletion strain 16 was capable of photoheterotrophic growth with acetate, while Rhodopseudomonas palustris RubisCO-deletions 2040 could not grow under these conditions.
Abstract: Rhodobacter sphaeroides ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (RubisCO)-deletion strain 16 was capable of photoheterotrophic growth with acetate, while Rhodopseudomonas palustris RubisCO-deletion strain 2040 could not grow under these conditions. The reason for this difference lies in the fact that Rba. sphaeroides and Rps. palustris use different pathways for acetate assimilation, the ethylmalonyl-CoA pathway, and glyoxylate-bypass cycle, respectively. The ethylmalonyl-CoA pathway is distinct from the glyoxylate cycle as one molecule of CO(2) and one molecule of HCO(3) (-) per three molecules of acetyl-CoA are co-assimilated to form two malate molecules. The glyoxylate cycle directly converts two acetyl-CoA molecules to malate. Each pathway, therefore, also dictates at what point, CO(2) and reductant are consumed, thereby determining the requirement for the Calvin-Benson-Bassham reductive pentose phosphate cycle.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The structures and functions of integrons in Shigella species and mechanisms that control integron-mediated events linked to antibiotic resistance are introduced.
Abstract: Integrons are gene capture and expression systems that are characterized by the presence of an integrase gene. This encodes an integrase, a recombined site, and a promoter. They are able to capture gene cassettes from the environment and incorporate them using site-specific recombination. The role of integrons and gene cassettes in the dissemination of multidrug resistance in Gram-negative bacteria is significant. In Shigella species, antimicrobial resistance is often associated with the presence of class 1 and class 2 integrons that contain resistance gene cassettes. Multiple and complex expression regulation mechanisms involving mobile genetic elements in integrons have been developed in the evolution of Shigella strains. Knowledge of the epidemiology and molecular mechanisms of antimicrobial resistance in this important pathogen is essential for the implementation of intervention strategies. This review was conducted to introduce the structures and functions of integrons in Shigella species and mechanisms that control integron-mediated events linked to antibiotic resistance.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The importance of levansucrase in environmental adaptation of G. diazotrophicus under high osmotic stress and in biofilm formation is demonstrated by a recovery of the ability to grow on sucrose-containing medium and to form slimy colonies.
Abstract: Gluconacetobacter diazotrophicus is a nitrogen-fixing bacterium and endophyte of sugarcane, which expresses levansucrase, a fructosyltransferase exoenzyme with sucrose hydrolytic and levan biosynthetic activities. As a result of their physical properties, the levan can provide protection against stress caused by abiotic or biotic factors and participate in the formation of biofilms. In this study, we investigated the construction and function of a levansucrase-defective mutant of G. diazotrophicus. The lsdA mutant showed a decreased tolerance (65.5%) to 50–150 mM NaCl and a decrease of 89% in 876 mM (30%) sucrose, a reduction (99%) in tolerance to desiccation after 18 h, and a decrease (36.9–58.5%) in the ability to form cell aggregates on abiotic surfaces. Complementation of the mutant with the complete lsdA gene leads to a recovery of the ability to grow on sucrose-containing medium and to form slimy colonies, the ability to form the cell aggregates on abiotic surfaces and the tolerance to NaCl. This report demonstrates the importance of levansucrase in environmental adaptation of G. diazotrophicus under high osmotic stress and in biofilm formation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study forms the first detailed report on phosphate solubilization by pink-pigmented facultative methylotrophic strains isolated from Adyar and Cooum rivers and forest soil samples in Tamil Nadu, India.
Abstract: Thirteen pink-pigmented facultative methylotrophic (PPFM) strains isolated from Adyar and Cooum rivers in Chennai and forest soil samples in Tamil Nadu, India, along with Methylobacterium extorquens, M. organophilum, M. gregans, and M. komagatae were screened for phosphate solubilization in plates. P-solubilization index of the PPFMs grown on NBRIP—BPB plates for 7 days ranged from 1.1 to 2.7. The growth of PPFMs in tricalcium phosphate amended media was found directly proportional to the glucose concentration. Higher phosphate solubilization was observed in four strains MSF 32 (415 mg l−l), MDW 80 (301 mg l−l), M. komagatae (279 mg l−l), and MSF 34 (202 mg l−l), after 7 days of incubation. A drop in the media pH from 6.6 to 3.4 was associated with an increase in titratable acidity. Acid phosphatase activity was more pronounced in the culture filtrate than alkaline phosphatase activity. Adherence of phosphate to densely grown bacterial surface was observed under scanning electron microscope after 7-day-old cultures. Biochemical characterization and screening for methanol dehydrogenase gene (mxaF) confirmed the strains as methylotrophs. The mxaF gene sequence from MSF 32 clustered towards M. lusitanum sp. with 99% similarity. This study forms the first detailed report on phosphate solubilization by the PPFMs.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results show that tolerance to radiation seems to be a common phenomenon among thermophilic and hyperthermophilic microorganisms.
Abstract: In this study, we investigated the ability of several (hyper-) thermophilic Archaea and phylogenetically deep-branching thermophilic Bacteria to survive high fluences of monochromatic UV-C (254 nm) and high doses of ionizing radiation, respectively. Nine out of fourteen tested microorganisms showed a surprisingly high tolerance against ionizing radiation, and two species (Aquifex pyrophilus and Ignicoccus hospitalis) were even able to survive 20 kGy. Therefore, these species had a comparable survivability after exposure to ionizing radiation such as Deinococcus radiodurans. In contrast, there was nearly no difference in survival of the tested strains after exposure to UV-C under anoxic conditions. If the cells had been dried in advance of UV-C irradiation, they were more sensitive to UV-C radiation compared with cells irradiated in liquid suspension; this effect could be reversed by the addition of protective material like sulfidic ores before irradiation. By exposure to UV-C, photoproducts were formed in the DNA of irradiated Archaea and Bacteria. The distribution of the main photoproducts was species specific, but the amount of the photoproducts was only partly dependent on the applied fluence. Overall, our results show that tolerance to radiation seems to be a common phenomenon among thermophilic and hyperthermophilic microorganisms.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This study has identified three novel σB-dependent transcripts encoded from genomic regions previously annotated as intergenic in Staphylococcus aureus, and found two of these genes were found to contain open reading frames encoding small, highly basic peptides that are conserved among StAPHylococci.
Abstract: In recent years, small RNAs (sRNAs) have been identified as important regulators of gene expression in bacteria. Most sRNAs are encoded from intergenic regions and are only expressed under highly specific growth conditions. In Staphylococcus aureus, the alternative sigma factor, σB, is known to contribute to the overall stress response, antibiotic resistance, and virulence. The σB regulon in S. aureus is well described and comprises approximately 200 annotated genes, including several genes encoding virulence factors. In the present study, we have identified three novel σB-dependent transcripts encoded from genomic regions previously annotated as intergenic. All three transcripts, named SbrA, SbrB, and SbrC, are highly conserved in S. aureus, and we confirmed their presence in four different isolates (SH1000, Newman, COL, and UAMS-1). Curiously, two of these genes (sbrA and sbrB) were found to contain open reading frames encoding small, highly basic peptides that are conserved among Staphylococci. The third transcript (SbrC) did not contain any likely open reading frame and thus constitute a genuine non-coding sRNA. The functions of these genes are currently unknown but are likely to be important for the σB-mediated response of S. aureus to adverse conditions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Differences in fatty acid profiles and utilization of organic substrates supported the view that strain 3AsT and Tm.
Abstract: A moderately acidophilic, facultative chemoautotrophic, As(III)-oxidizing Thiomonas sp. (strain 3As(T)) was previously shown, on the basis of comparative 16S rRNA gene sequences, to be closely related to both Tm. perometabolis DSM 18570(T) and Tm. intermedia DSM 18155(T). While it had shared many physiological traits with Tm. intermedia (T), a mean DNA-DNA hybridization value (DDHV) of 47.2% confirmed that strain 3As(T) was not a strain of Tm. intermedia, though the situation with regard to Tm. perometabolis (DDHV previously determined as 72%) was more ambiguous. A comparative physiological and chemotaxonomic study of strain 3As(T) and Tm. perometabolis (T) was therefore carried out, together with multilocus sequence analysis (MLSA) of all three bacteria. Differences in fatty acid profiles and utilization of organic substrates supported the view that strain 3As(T) and Tm. perometabolis are distinct species, while MLSA showed a closer relationship between strain 3As(T) and Tm. intermedia (T) than between strain 3As(T) and Tm. perometabolis (T). These apparent contradictory conclusions were explained by differences in genome of these three bacteria, which are known to be highly flexible in Thiomonas spp. A novel species designation Thiomonas arsenitoxydans is proposed for strain 3As(T) (DSM 22701(T), CIP 110005(T)), which is nominated as the type strain of this species.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that bacteria with methylotrophic potential are ubiquitous in the human mouth microbiota, and the first report of Gordonia, Leifsonia, and Rhodococcus being present in the mouth and of the unequivocal demonstration for the first time of the methylot microscopic potential.
Abstract: We show that bacteria with methylotrophic potential are ubiquitous in the human mouth microbiota. Numerous strains of Actinobacteria (Brevibacterium, Gordonia, Leifsonia, Microbacterium, Micrococcus, Rhodococcus) and Proteobacteria (Achromobacter, Klebsiella, Methylobacterium, Pseudomonas, Ralstonia) were isolated, and one strain of each of the eleven genera was studied in detail. These strains expressed enzymes associated with methylotrophic metabolism (methanol, methylamine, and formate dehydrogenases), and the assimilation of one-carbon compounds by the serine pathway (hydroxypyruvate reductase). Methylotrophic growth of the strains was enhanced by the addition of glass beads to cultures, suggesting that they may naturally occur in biofilms in the mouth. This is the first report of Gordonia, Leifsonia, and Rhodococcus being present in the mouth and of the unequivocal demonstration for the first time of the methylotrophic potential of strains of Gordonia, Leifsonia, and Microbacterium.

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TL;DR: In this article, homology modeling of S. meliloti Hfq protein and cross-complementation experiments with E. coli mutants indicates that hfq is a key player in riboregulatory processes.
Abstract: Riboregulation comprises gene expression regulatory mechanisms that rely upon the activity of small non-coding RNAs (sRNAs) and in most cases RNA binding proteins. In γ-proteobacteria, the Sm-like protein Hfq is a key player in riboregulatory processes, because it promotes sRNA–mRNA interactions and influences mRNA polyadenylation or translation. In the α-proteobacterium Sinorhizobium meliloti, the large number of detected small RNA transcripts and the pleiotropic effects of hfq mutations lead to the hypothesis that riboregulatory mechanisms are important in this soil microorganism to adjust gene expression both in free-living conditions and as a nitrogen-fixing endosymbiont within legume root nodules. In this study, homology modeling of S. meliloti Hfq protein and cross-complementation experiments of S. meliloti and Escherichia coli mutants indicates that hfq Sm encodes an RNA chaperone that can be functionally exchanged by its homolog from E. coli. A transcriptional and translational analysis of S. meliloti hfq expression by means of lacZ reporter fusions strongly suggests that the S. meliloti Hfq protein autocontrols its expression at the translational level, a phenomenon that was evident in the natural host S. meliloti as well as in the heterologous host E. coli.

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TL;DR: Findings implicate the evolution to an increased UV radioresistance was not limited to a specific growth phase and led to reduced growth dynamics, compared with those obtained from the ancestral and the control strain.
Abstract: After 700 generations of a short-term evolution experiment with Bacillus subtilis 168, two strains were isolated, the UV-adapted strain MW01 and the UV-unexposed control strain DE69, and chosen for UV-C radiation resistance studies with respect to growth phase. The ancestral strain from the evolution experiment was used as reference for comparative purposes. Cells of the UV-adapted strain showed significant differences in their physiology (growth behavior, doubling time, cell density, and sporulation capacity) and were more resistant to UV in all monitored stages. These findings implicate the evolution to an increased UV radioresistance was not limited to a specific growth phase and led to reduced growth dynamics, compared with those obtained from the ancestral and the control strain.

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TL;DR: It is demonstrated that when M. pneumoniae was grown on an abiotic surface of either glass or polystyrene with a serum-containing medium, the bacteria adhered to the surface and formed highly differentiated volcano-like biofilm structures, suggesting that the initial step in the adherence to and/or biofilm formation by M. tuberculosis is the interaction of the bacterium through its tip organelle with sialic acid residues of serum glycoproteins.
Abstract: We demonstrated that when M pneumoniae was grown on an abiotic surface of either glass or polystyrene with a serum-containing medium, the bacteria adhered to the surface and formed highly differentiated volcano-like biofilm structures As adherence to the surface and/or biofilm formation was totally inhibited by anti-P1 polyclonal monospecific antibodies, we suggest that the adherence of M pneumoniae to the abiotic surface and/or biofilm formation is associated with P1, the major tip organelle protein of this organism Furthermore, adherence and/or biofilm formation was markedly inhibited by treating the serum component of the growth medium with neuraminidase or by growing the bacteria in the presence of sialyllactose, suggesting that the initial step in the adherence to and/or biofilm formation by M pneumoniae on an abiotic surface is the interaction of the bacterium through its tip organelle with sialic acid residues of serum glycoproteins

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TL;DR: It is proposed that CtrA participates within a two-component signal transduction pathway that promotes swarming motility while contributing to the suppression of cyst cell formation.
Abstract: The α-proteobacterium, Rhodospirillum centenum, has a complex life cycle that allows adaptation to different environments. Transitions between vegetative swim cell and swarmer cell types depend on whether the organism is growing in liquid surroundings or on a solid substrate. Moreover, starvation can induce vegetative cells to differentiate into quiescent cysts. This paper describes the results of our investigation into the role of a putative DNA-binding response regulator that is homologous to CtrA, the cell cycle regulator from Caulobacter crescentus. Deletion of ctrA from the R. centenum genome resulted in a viable strain with impaired swarming motility coupled with an increased tendency to form cysts. Conversely, overexpression of wild type CtrA or a phosphomimetic allele, CtrAD51E, suppressed cyst cell formation, whereas overexpression of a CtrAD51A allele failed to suppress encystment but did prevent swarming motility. Thus, we propose that CtrA participates within a two-component signal transduction pathway that promotes swarming motility while contributing to the suppression of cyst cell formation.