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Glycine betaine confers enhanced osmotolerance and cryotolerance on Listeria monocytogenes.

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TLDR
The kinetics of glycine betaine transport suggest that the two transport systems are indistinguishable in terms of affinity for betaine and may be the same, and a cold-activated transport system is a novel observation and has intriguing implications concerning the physical state of the cell membrane at low temperature.
Abstract
Listeria monocytogenes is a gram-positive food-borne pathogen that is notably resistant to osmotic stress and can grow at refrigerator temperatures. These two characteristics make it an insidious threat to public health. Like several other organisms, L. monocytogenes accumulates glycine betaine, a ubiquitous and effective osmolyte, intracellularly when grown under osmotic stress. However, it also accumulates glycine betaine when grown under chill stress at refrigerator temperatures. Exogenously added glycine betaine enhances the growth rate of stressed but not unstressed cells, i.e., it confers both osmotolerance and cryotolerance. Both salt-stimulated and cold-stimulated accumulation of glycine betaine occur by transport from the medium rather than by biosynthesis. Direct measurement of glycine betaine uptake shows that cells transport betaine 200-fold faster at high salt concentration (4% NaCl) than without added salt and 15-fold faster at 7 than at 30 degrees C. The kinetics of glycine betaine transport suggest that the two transport systems are indistinguishable in terms of affinity for betaine and may be the same. Hyperosmotic shock and cold shock experiments suggest the transport system(s) to be constitutive; activation was not blocked by chloramphenicol. A cold-activated transport system is a novel observation and has intriguing implications concerning the physical state of the cell membrane at low temperature.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Microbial stress‐response physiology and its implications for ecosystem function

TL;DR: It is suggested that more effectively integrating microbial ecology into ecosystem ecology will require a more complete integration of microbial physiological ecology, population biology, and process ecology.
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Uptake and synthesis of compatible solutes as microbial stress responses to high-osmolality environments.

TL;DR: The intracellular amassing of compatible solutes as an adaptive strategy to high-osmolality environments is evolutionarily well-conserved in Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya.
Journal ArticleDOI

Betaine in human nutrition

TL;DR: The growing body of evidence shows that betaine is an important nutrient for the prevention of chronic disease and has been shown to protect internal organs, improve vascular risk factors, and enhance performance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Bacterial osmoadaptation: the role of osmolytes in bacterial stress and virulence

TL;DR: The molecular mechanisms governing the accumulation of these compounds, both in Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, are reviewed, focusing specifically on the regulation of their transport/synthesis systems and the ability of these systems to sense and respond to changes in the osmolarity of the extracellular environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

Osmosensing by Bacteria: Signals and Membrane-Based Sensors

TL;DR: Evidence that sensor kinase KdpD receives multiple sensory inputs is consistent with the effects of K+ fluxes on nucleoid structure, cellular energetics, cytoplasmic ionic strength, and ion composition as well as on cytopLasmic osmolality.
References
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Journal Article

Protein Measurement with the Folin Phenol Reagent

TL;DR: Procedures are described for measuring protein in solution or after precipitation with acids or other agents, and for the determination of as little as 0.2 gamma of protein.
Journal ArticleDOI

Living with water stress: evolution of osmolyte systems

TL;DR: Osmolyte compatibility is proposed to result from the absence of osmolytes interactions with substrates and cofactors, and the nonperturbing or favorable effects of oSMolytes on macromolecular-solvent interactions.
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Physiological and genetic responses of bacteria to osmotic stress.

TL;DR: This review is an account of the processes that mediate adaptation of bacteria to changes in their osmotic environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

The role of alterations in membrane lipid composition in enabling physiological adaptation of organisms to their physical environment.

TL;DR: It is suggested that the minimally effective stimuli for both temperature and pressure adaptation are similar, and direct effects of enzymes of lipid metabolism respond directly to variations in the physical environment in an apparently adaptive manner.
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