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Query: UMLS:C0038187 (
starvation
)
24,951
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
When the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe is starved for nitrogen, the cells are arrested in the G1 phase, enter the G0 phase and initiate sexual development. The ste13 mutant, however, fails to undergo a G1 arrest when starved for nitrogen and since this mutant phenotype is not suppressed by a mutation in adenylyl cyclase (cyr1), it would appear that ste13+ either acts independently of the decrease in the cellular cAMP level induced by
starvation
for nitrogen, or functions downstream of this controlling event. We have used functional complementation to clone the ste13+ gene from an S. pombe genomic library and show that its disruption is not lethal, indicating that, while the gene is required for sexual development, it is not essential for cell growth. Nucleotide sequencing predicts that ste13+ should encode a protein of 485 amino acids in which the consensus motifs of ATP-dependent RNA helicases of the
DEAD
box family are completely conserved. Point mutations introduced into these consensus motifs abolished the ste13+ functions. The predicted Ste13 protein is 72% identical to the Drosophila melanogaster Me31B protein over a stretch of 391 amino acids. ME31B is a developmentally regulated gene that is expressed preferentially in the female germline and may be required for oogenesis. Expression of ME31B cDNA in S. pombe suppresses the ste13 mutation. These two evolutionarily conserved genes encoding putative RNA helicases may play a pivotal role in sexual development.
...
PMID:The ste13+ gene encoding a putative RNA helicase is essential for nitrogen starvation-induced G1 arrest and initiation of sexual development in the fission yeast Schizosaccharomyces pombe. 807 73
Escherichia coli O157:H7 can persist for days to weeks in microcosms simulating natural conditions. In this study, we used a suite of fluorescent, in situ stains and probes to assess the influence of
starvation
on physiological activity based on membrane potential (rhodamine 123 assay), membrane integrity (LIVE/
DEAD
BacLight kit), respiratory activity (5-cyano-2,3-di-4-tolyl-tetrazolium chloride assay), intracellular esterase activity (ScanRDI assay), and 16S rRNA content. Growth-dependent assays were also used to assess substrate responsiveness (direct viable count [DVC] assay), ATP activity (MicroStar assay), and culturability (R2A agar assay). In addition, resistance to chlorine disinfection was assessed. After 14 days of
starvation
, the DVC values decreased, while the values in all other assays remained relatively constant and equivalent to each other. Chlorine resistance progressively increased through the
starvation
period. After 29 days of
starvation
, there was no significant difference in chlorine resistance between control cultures that had not been exposed to the disinfectant and cultures that had been exposed. This study demonstrates that E. coli O157:H7 adapts to
starvation
conditions by developing a chlorine resistance phenotype.
...
PMID:Effects of starvation on physiological activity and chlorine disinfection resistance in Escherichia coli O157:H7. 983 45
The changes in bacterial counts during the storage of a natural mineral water from a French spring were studied. Samples were taken from the spring and the bottling line. Viable cultivable (VC) bacteria were counted on R2A medium. Total counts, viable and dead bacteria were counted using the LIVE/
DEAD
Bac Light VIABILITY kit and epifluorescence microscopy. Viable but non-cultivable (VNC) bacteria were estimated by difference between viable and VC counts. Isolates were clustered by phenotype. The microflora in the spring water increased from < 10-3 x 10(5) bacteria ml-1 after 6 d in storage and then stabilized. Mechanical bottling increased the allochthonous bacteria in the water that stabilized at 10(5) bacteria ml-1. Maximal growth is controlled by the low concentration of nutrients in the mineral water and the lysis of dead cells. The allochthonous bacteria came from the aquifer and colonized the filling line. The changes in the VC and VNC populations showed that the bacteria used
starvation
-survival and entry into the VNC state to adapt to the bottling stress and the enclosed oligotrophic environment.
...
PMID:Total counts, culturable and viable, and non-culturable microflora of a French mineral water: a case study. 1038 50
The behavior of Aeromonas hydrophila stored at 4 degrees C and 25 degrees C in nutrient-poor filtered sterilized distilled water was investigated. At 4 degrees C, the A. hydrophila population declined below the detection level (0.1 cell mL(-1)) after 7 weeks, whereas the number of cells with intact membrane as determined by the LIVE/
DEAD
method decreased only by 1 log unit. Although, this response is reminiscent of the so-called VBNC state, the cells could not be resuscitated by an upshift to 25 degrees C. A mixture of rods with normal size and elongated cells was observed in this state. At 25 degrees C, viable cells and cells with intact membrane declined only by 0.8 log unit over the 10-week storage period, and thus A. hydrophila entered the classical
starvation
survival state. During this state, a mixture of rods and cocci was observed. Prestarvation at 25 degrees C for 24 h and especially 49 days delayed significantly the rate of entry into the VBNC state. However, stationary phase cells were not significantly more tolerant than exponential phase cells. No significant improvements in recovery yield were obtained on LB agar plates amended with catalase or sodium pyruvate. During cold incubation, high variability in responses was observed. Intermittent cryptic regrowth might be responsible for this variability in responses.
...
PMID:Starvation survival and viable but nonculturable states in Aeromonas hydrophila. 1202 32
One of the popular ideas is that decline in methyl-directed mismatch repair (MMR) in carbon-starved bacteria might facilitate occurrence of stationary-phase mutations. We compared the frequency of accumulation of stationary-phase mutations in carbon-starved Pseudomonas putida wild-type and MMR-defective strains and found that knockout of MMR system increased significantly emergence of base substitutions in starving P. putida. At the same time, the appearance of 1-bp deletion mutations was less affected by MMR in this bacterium. The spectrum of base substitution mutations which occurred in starving populations of P. putida wild-type strain was distinct from mutation spectrum identified in MMR-defective strains. The spectrum of base substitutions differed also in this case when mutants emerged in starved populations of MutS or MutL-defective strains were comparatively analyzed. Based on our results we suppose that other mechanisms than malfunctioning of MMR system in resting cells might be considered to explain the accumulation of stationary-phase mutations in P. putida. To further characterize populations of P. putida starved on selective plates, we stained bacteria with LIVE/
DEAD
kit in situ on agar plates. We found that although the overall number of colony forming units (CFU) did not decline in long-term-starved populations, these populations were very heterogeneous on the plates and contained many dead cells. Our results imply that slow growth of subpopulation of cells at the expenses of dead cells on selective plates might be important for the generation of stationary-phase mutations in P. putida. Additionally, the different survival patterns of P. putida on the same selective plates hint that competitive interactions taking place under conditions of prolonged
starvation
of microbial populations on semi-solid surfaces might be more complicated than previously assumed.
...
PMID:Involvement of DNA mismatch repair in stationary-phase mutagenesis during prolonged starvation of Pseudomonas putida. 1641 11
Although Campylobacter jejuni is the leading cause of bacterial diarrhoeal disease in humans worldwide, its potential to adapt to the stressful conditions and survive in extra-intestinal environment is still poorly understood. We tested the effect of heat shock (55 degrees C, 3 min) and oxidative stress (3 mM H2O2 for 10 min or prolonged incubation at atmosphere oxygen concentration) on non-starved and starved cells of Campylobacter jejuni from different growth phases. Viability as assessed with the Bacterial Viability Kit LIVE/
DEAD
BacLighttrade mark dying before fluorescent microscopy and culturability of the cells (CFU ml(-1)) from both growth phases showed that
starvation
increased heat but not oxidative resistance. High temperature and oxidative stress invoked quick transformation from culturable spiral shaped to nonculturable spiral and coccoid cells. Despite physiological changes of the cells we were not able to document clear differences in the expression of heat shock and
starvation
genes (dnaK, htpG, groEL), oxidative (ahpC, sodB), virulence (flaA) and housekeeping genes (16S rRNA, rpoD) after heat treatment (55 degrees C, 3 min) or oxidative stresses applied. When starving, no induction of expression of any of these genes was noticed, chloramphenicol had no influence on their gene expression. Quantitative real-time PCR analyses showed that at least 10-20 min of heat shock was necessary to evidently increase the amount of groEL and rpoD transcripts.
...
PMID:Survival and stress induced expression of groEL and rpoD of Campylobacter jejuni from different growth phases. 1678 21
The aim of this study was to optimize a protocol that allows identifying changes at the phosphorylation level of specific proteins in response to cell stimulation by leucine
starvation
. To make possible the identification of differentially phosphorylated proteins by the combination of two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE) and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS), we prepared fraction enriched in phosphoproteins. For that purpose, we adapted the immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) technique to make it compatible with 2D-PAGE. On the whole, this procedure allowed identifying regulated targets of leucine deprivation: molecular chaperones glucose-regulated protein 58 kDa (GRP58) and BiP (GRP78), RNA helicase
DEAD
box polypeptide 3, and eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4B (eIF4B).
...
PMID:Phospho-proteomic approach to identify new targets of leucine deprivation in muscle cells. 1861 11
Permafrost soils are extreme environments that exert low-temperature, desiccation, and
starvation
stress on bacteria over thousands to millions of years. To understand how Psychrobacter arcticus 273-4 survived for >20,000 years in permafrost, transcriptome analysis was performed during growth at 22 degrees C, 17 degrees C, 0 degrees C, and -6 degrees C using a mixed-effects analysis of variance model. Genes for transcription, translation, energy production, and most biosynthetic pathways were downregulated at low temperatures. Evidence of isozyme exchange was detected over temperature for D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidases (dac1 and dac2),
DEAD
-box RNA helicases (csdA and Psyc_0943), and energy-efficient substrate incorporation pathways for ammonium and acetate. Specific functions were compensated by upregulation of genes at low temperature, including genes for the biosynthesis of proline, tryptophan, and methionine. RNases and peptidases were generally upregulated at low temperatures. Changes in energy metabolism, amino acid metabolism, and RNase gene expression were consistent with induction of a resource efficiency response. In contrast to results observed for other psychrophiles and mesophiles, only clpB and hsp33 were upregulated at low temperature, and there was no upregulation of other chaperones and peptidyl-prolyl isomerases. relA, csdA, and dac2 knockout mutants grew more slowly at low temperature, but a dac1 mutant grew more slowly at 17 degrees C. The combined data suggest that the basal biological machinery, including translation, transcription, and energy metabolism, is well adapted to function across the growth range of P. arcticus from -6 degrees C to 22 degrees C, and temperature compensation by gene expression was employed to address specific challenges to low-temperature growth.
...
PMID:Psychrobacter arcticus 273-4 uses resource efficiency and molecular motion adaptations for subzero temperature growth. 1916 16
Media-based bacteriological testing will fail to detect non-culturable organisms and the risk of consuming viable but non-culturable (VBNC) Listeria monocytogenes is unknown. We have here studied whether L. monocytogenes obtained from seafoods, processing environment and clinical cases enter the VBNC state and assessed the virulence of the non-culturable forms of the bacteria. A number of 16 L. monocytogenes strains were starved in microcosm water at 4 degrees C until loss of culturability. Metabolic activity in the VBNC form was measured as ATP generation using a luciferase assay and membrane integrity was examined using the LIVE/
DEAD
BacLight assay. All tested L. monocytogenes strains entered the VBNC state after
starvation
in microcosm water. Ongoing mRNA synthesis of hly in VBNC L. monocytogenes cells re-incubated in culture medium indicated a potential virulence of these forms. Sodium pyruvate and replenishment of nutrient were used in attempts to resuscitate VBNC cells. However, VBNC L. monocytogenes were not resuscitated under these conditions. VBNC L. monocytogenes were tested for virulence in a cell plaque assay and by intraperitoneally inoculation in immunodeficient RAG1(-/-) mice. Inoculation of VBNC L. monocytogenes in immunodeficient mice did not cause morbidity, and plaque assay on HT-29 cells in culture indicated that the VBNC cells were avirulent. The results indicate that the risk of non-culturable L. monocytogenes in foods, when the VBNC state is induced by
starvation
, is negligible.
...
PMID:The ability to enter into an avirulent viable but non-culturable (VBNC) form is widespread among Listeria monocytogenes isolates from salmon, patients and environment. 1979 7
The protein Gcn1 (General control non-derepressible 1) is found in virtually all eukaryotes, and is a key component of the general amino acid control signal transduction pathway. This pathway is best known for its importance for cells to sense and overcome amino acid
starvation
. Gcn1 directly binds to the RWD (RING finger-containing proteins, WD-repeat-containing proteins, and yeast
DEAD
(DEXD)-like helicases) domain of the protein kinase Gcn2, and this is essential for delivering the
starvation
signal to Gcn2. Gcn2, and thus the GAAC (General Amino Acid Control) pathway, then becomes activated enabling the cell to cope and overcome the
starvation
condition. Using sensitive homology detection and fold recognition methods a conserved structural domain in Gcn1, RWD Binding Domain (RWDBD), has been recognized that encompasses the region experimentally shown previously to be involved in Gcn2 binding. Further, the structural fold for this domain has been recognized as the ARM (Armadillo) domain, and residues likely to be involved in the binding of Gcn2 RWD domain have been identified within this structural domain. Thus, the current analysis provides a structural basis of Gcn1-Gcn2 association.
...
PMID:Recognition of a structural domain (RWDBD) in Gcn1 proteins that interacts with the RWD domain containing proteins. 2852 57
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