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. 1967 Sep;94(3):522–529. doi: 10.1128/jb.94.3.522-529.1967

Separation of Two Functional Roles of l-Alanine in the Initiation of Bacillus subtilis Spore Germination

Richard Wax 1, Ernst Freese 1, Michael Cashel 1
PMCID: PMC251917  PMID: 4962298

Abstract

Spores of the standard transformable Marburg strain of Bacillus subtilis can be initiated to germinate by l-alanine alone. We isolated mutants which required for this process, in addition to l-alanine, the combination of d-glucose + d-fructose + K+ or NH4+ ions. In place of fructose, autoclaved or caramelized glucose could be used. Even the standard type strain required the addition of these three agents when d-alanine was present or when the temperature was raised. These findings show that l-alanine normally performs two functions during initiation, one of which is absent in the mutants or is blocked by d-alanine or elevated temperature. One of our mutants was not absolutely dependent on the addition of external l-alanine, because it could be initiated at a reduced rate by the sole addition of glucose + K+ or NH4+. When K+ or NH4+ was replaced by Na+, the initiation rate was greatly reduced. The divalent metal ions Mg++, Mn++, and Ca++ could not satisfy the cation requirement.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

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