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  3. Multiple roads lead to Rome: unique morphology and chemistry of endospores, exospores, myxospores, cysts and akinetes in bacteria.
 

Multiple roads lead to Rome: unique morphology and chemistry of endospores, exospores, myxospores, cysts and akinetes in bacteria.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/179067
Publisher DOI
10.1099/mic.0.001299
PubMed ID
36804869
Description
The production of specialized resting cells is a remarkable survival strategy developed by many organisms to withstand unfavourable environmental factors such as nutrient depletion or other changes in abiotic and/or biotic conditions. Five bacterial taxa are recognized to form specialized resting cells: Firmicutes, forming endospores; Actinobacteria, forming exospores; Cyanobacteria, forming akinetes; the δ-Proteobacterial order Myxococcales, forming myxospores; and Azotobacteraceae, forming cysts. All these specialized resting cells are characterized by low-to-absent metabolic activity and higher resistance to environmental stress (desiccation, heat, starvation, etc.) when compared to vegetative cells. Given their similarity in function, we tested the potential existence of a universal morpho-chemical marker for identifying these specialized resting cells. After the production of endospores, exospores, akinetes and cysts in model organisms, we performed the first cross-species morphological and chemical comparison of bacterial sporulation. Cryo-electron microscopy of vitreous sections (CEMOVIS) was used to describe near-native morphology of the resting cells in comparison to the morphology of their respective vegetative cells. Resting cells shared a thicker cell envelope as their only common morphological feature. The chemical composition of the different specialized resting cells at the single-cell level was investigated using confocal Raman microspectroscopy. Our results show that the different specialized cells do not share a common chemical signature, but rather each group has a unique signature with a variable conservation of the signature of the vegetative cells. Additionally, we present the validation of Raman signatures associated with calcium dipicolinic acid (CaDPA) and their variation across individual cells to develop specific sorting thresholds for the isolation of endospores. This provides a proof of concept of the feasibility of isolating bacterial spores using a Raman-activated cell-sorting platform. This cross-species comparison and the current knowledge of genetic pathways inducing the formation of the resting cells highlights the complexity of this convergent evolutionary strategy promoting bacterial survival.
Date of Publication
2023-02
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 - Technology::610 - Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
CEMOVIS Raman microspectroscopy akinete calcium dipicolinic acid (CaDPA) cyst endospore exospore myxospore
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Corona Ramírez, Andrea
Lee, Kang Soo
Odriozola Quesada, Adolfo
Institut für Anatomie
Kaminek, Marek
Institut für Anatomie
Stocker, Roman
Zuber, Benoîtorcid-logo
Institut für Anatomie
Junier, Pilar
Additional Credits
Institut für Anatomie
Series
Microbiology
Publisher
Microbiology Society
ISSN
1465-2080
Access(Rights)
open.access
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