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- Temperature Matters: Bacterial Response to Temperature Change
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Seongjoon Moon , Soojeong Ham , Juwon Jeong , Heechan Ku , Hyunhee Kim , Changhan Lee
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J. Microbiol. 2023;61(3):343-357. Published online April 3, 2023
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12275-023-00031-x
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17
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Abstract
- Temperature is one of the most important factors in all living organisms for survival. Being a unicellular organism, bacterium
requires sensitive sensing and defense mechanisms to tolerate changes in temperature. During a temperature shift,
the structure and composition of various cellular molecules including nucleic acids, proteins, and membranes are affected.
In addition, numerous genes are induced during heat or cold shocks to overcome the cellular stresses, which are known as
heat- and cold-shock proteins. In this review, we describe the cellular phenomena that occur with temperature change and
bacterial responses from a molecular perspective, mainly in Escherichia coli.
Journal Article
- Vibrio parahaemolyticus cqsA controls production of quorum sensing signal molecule 3-hydroxyundecan-4-one and regulatessensing signal molecule 3-hydroxyundecan-4-one and regulates colony morphology
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Kui Wu , Yangyun Zheng , Qingping Wu , Haiying Chen , Songzhe Fu , Biao Kan , Yongyan Long , Xiansheng Ni , Junling Tu
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J. Microbiol. 2019;57(12):1105-1114. Published online November 4, 2019
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12275-019-9379-x
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11
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Abstract
- In order to adapt to different environments, Vibrio parahaemolyticus
employed a complicated quorum sensing system to
orchestrate gene expression and diverse colony morphology
patterns. In this study, the function of the putative quorum
sensing signal synthase gene cqsA (VPA0711 in V. parahaemolyticus
strain RIMD2210633 genome) was investigated.
The cloning and expression of V. parahaemolyticus cqsA in
Escherichia coli system induced the production of a new quorum
sensing signal that was found in its culture supernatant.
The signal was purified by high performance liquid chromatography
methods
and determined to be 3-hydroxyundecan-
4-one by indirect and direct mass spectra assays. The deletion
of cqsA in RIMD2210633 changed V. parahaemolyticus
colony morphology from the classical ‘fried-egg’ shape (thick
and opaque in the center, while thin and translucent in the
edge) of the wild-type colony to a ‘pancake’ shape (no significant
difference between the centre and the edge) of the cqsAdeleted
colony. This morphological change could be restored
by complementary experiment with cqsA gene or the signal
extract. In addition, the expression of opaR, a well-known
quorum sensing regulatory gene, could be up-regulated by
cqsA deletion. Our results suggested that V. parahaemolyticus
used cqsA to produce 3-hydroxyundecan-4-one signal
and thereby regulated colony morphology and other quorum
sensing-associated behaviors.
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