Formaldehyde kills spores of Bacillus subtilis by DNA damage and small, acid‐soluble spore proteins of the ααααααα/βββββββ‐type protect spores against this DNA damage

1999 
Killing of wild-type spores of Bacillus subtilis with formaldehyde also caused significant mutagenesis; spores (termed α−β−) lacking the two major α/β-type small, acid-soluble spore proteins (SASP) were more sensitive to both formaldehyde killing and mutagenesis. A recA mutation sensitized both wild-type and α−β− spores to formaldehyde treatment, which caused significant expression of a recA-lacZ fusion when the treated spores germinated. Formaldehyde also caused protein–DNA cross-linking in both wild-type and α−β− spores. These results indicate that: (i) formaldehyde kills B. subtilis spores at least in part by DNA damage and (b) α/β-type SASP protect against spore killing by formaldehyde, presumably by protecting spore DNA.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    25
    References
    59
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []