: Spores of Bacillus subtilis are surrounded and protected by the coat and the crust, multi-layered structures mainly made of proteins and polysaccharides. These polysaccharides are covalently linked to some of the coat and crust proteins and influence some spore properties, such as surface adhesion and hydrophilicity. This study reports that a mutant strain lacking the spsA-L operon, encoding 11 enzymes involved in the synthesis of spore surface polysaccharides, produced spores exposing on their surface hydrophobic molecules that were responsible for the drastic reduction of hydrophilicity of the mutant spores. Biochemical and genetic data support the identification of the C35-terpenoid curcumene, a precursor of the spore-associated lipid sporulene, as the highly hydrophobic molecule present on the surface of mutant spores.IMPORTANCEBacterial spores are the most resistant cell forms on Earth. The metabolically quiescent spores withstand conditions that would be lethal for other cells, maintaining the capacity to sense the environment and respond to the presence of favorable conditions by germinating. Such remarkable resistance is also due to the complex layers that surround the spore cytoplasm and protect it against damaging factors. Altogether, the spore surface layers form a complex cell structure composed of proteins, polysaccharides, and, as highlighted by this study, also of lipids. Understanding the complexity of the spore surface and the specific molecules involved in its structure is an essential step for unraveling the mechanisms underlying the spore's resistance to environmental assaults.

The triterpenoid curcumene mediates the relative hydrophilicity of Bacillus subtilis spores / Castaldi, Stefany; Donadio, Giuliana; Staiano, Ivana; Ricca, Ezio; Isticato, Rachele. - In: MBIO. - ISSN 2150-7511. - (2024). [10.1128/mbio.03024-24]

The triterpenoid curcumene mediates the relative hydrophilicity of Bacillus subtilis spores

Castaldi, Stefany
Primo
Investigation
;
Donadio, Giuliana
Investigation
;
Staiano, Ivana
Investigation
;
Ricca, Ezio
Writing – Review & Editing
;
Isticato, Rachele
Ultimo
Supervision
2024

Abstract

: Spores of Bacillus subtilis are surrounded and protected by the coat and the crust, multi-layered structures mainly made of proteins and polysaccharides. These polysaccharides are covalently linked to some of the coat and crust proteins and influence some spore properties, such as surface adhesion and hydrophilicity. This study reports that a mutant strain lacking the spsA-L operon, encoding 11 enzymes involved in the synthesis of spore surface polysaccharides, produced spores exposing on their surface hydrophobic molecules that were responsible for the drastic reduction of hydrophilicity of the mutant spores. Biochemical and genetic data support the identification of the C35-terpenoid curcumene, a precursor of the spore-associated lipid sporulene, as the highly hydrophobic molecule present on the surface of mutant spores.IMPORTANCEBacterial spores are the most resistant cell forms on Earth. The metabolically quiescent spores withstand conditions that would be lethal for other cells, maintaining the capacity to sense the environment and respond to the presence of favorable conditions by germinating. Such remarkable resistance is also due to the complex layers that surround the spore cytoplasm and protect it against damaging factors. Altogether, the spore surface layers form a complex cell structure composed of proteins, polysaccharides, and, as highlighted by this study, also of lipids. Understanding the complexity of the spore surface and the specific molecules involved in its structure is an essential step for unraveling the mechanisms underlying the spore's resistance to environmental assaults.
2024
The triterpenoid curcumene mediates the relative hydrophilicity of Bacillus subtilis spores / Castaldi, Stefany; Donadio, Giuliana; Staiano, Ivana; Ricca, Ezio; Isticato, Rachele. - In: MBIO. - ISSN 2150-7511. - (2024). [10.1128/mbio.03024-24]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/990889
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