A. P. Shorokhova
Russian Academy of Sciences
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Microbiology | 2004
N. E. Suzina; A. L. Mulyukin; A. N. Kozlova; A. P. Shorokhova; V. V. Dmitriev; E. S. Barinova; O. N. Mokhova; G. I. El'-Registan; V. I. Duda
Using electron microscopy (ultrathin sections and freeze-fractures), we investigated the ultrastructure of the resting cells formed in cultures of Micrococcus luteus, Arthrobacter globiformis, and Pseudomonas aurantiaca under conditions of prolonged incubation (up to 9 months). These resting cells included cystlike forms that were characterized by a complex cell structure and the following ultrastructural properties: (i) a thickened or multiprofiled cell wall (CW), typically made up of a layer of the preexisting CW and one to three de novo synthesized murein layers; (ii) a thick, structurally differentiated capsule; (iii) the presence of large intramembrane particles (d = 180–270 Å), occurring both on the PF and EF faces of the membrane fractures of M. luteus and A. globiformis; (iv) a peculiar structure of the cytoplasm, which was either fine-grained or lumpy (coarse-grained) in different parts of the cell population; and (v) a condensed nucleoid. Intense formation of cystlike cells occurred in aged (2- to 9-month-old) bacterial cultures grown on diluted complex media or on nitrogen-, carbon-, and phosphorus-limited synthetic media, as well as in cell suspensions incubated in media with sodium silicate. The general morphological properties, ultrastructural organization, and physiological features of cystlike cells formed during the developmental cycle suggest that constitutive dormancy is characteristic of non-spore-forming bacteria.
Microbiology | 2004
V. I. Duda; V. N. Danilevich; N. E. Suzina; A. P. Shorokhova; V. V. Dmitriev; O. N. Mokhova; V. N. Akimov
The electron microscopic examination of thin sections of cells of the yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Pichia pastoris and the gram-positive bacteria Micrococcus luteus and Bacillus subtilis showed that cell treatment with the chaotropic salts guanidine hydrochloride (6 M) and guanidine thiocyanate (4 M) at 37°C for 3–5 h or at 100°C for 5–6 min induced degradative processes, which affected almost all cellular structures. The cell wall, however, retained its ultrastructure, integrity, and rigidity, due to which the morphology of cells treated with the chaotropic salts did not change. High-molecular-weight DNA was localized in a new cell compartment, the ectoplasm (a peripheral hydrophilic zone). The chaotropic salts destroyed the outer and inner membranes and partially degraded the outer and inner protein coats of Bacillus subtilis spores, leaving their cortex (the murein layer) unchanged. The spore core became accessible to stains and showed the presence of regions with high and low electron densities. The conditions of cell treatment with the chaotropic salts were chosen to provide for efficient in situ PCR analysis of the 16S and 18S rRNA genes with the use of oligonucleotide primers.
Microbiology | 2001
N. E. Suzina; A. L. Mulyukin; N. G. Loiko; A. N. Kozlova; V. V. Dmitriev; A. P. Shorokhova; V. M. Gorlenko; V. I. Duda; G. I. El'-Registan
Under the influence of alkyl hydroxybenzene (C6-AHB) added to cell suspensions at concentrations of (1–5) × 10–3M, the cells of Saccharomycescerevisiae, Micrococcusluteus, and Thioalkalivibrioversutusunderwent dramatic changes in the ultrastructural organization of cell membranes, cytoplasm, and inclusions. In yeast suspension, the first changes were observed after 15 min in the structure of pocket-like invaginations in the cytoplasmic membrane (CM): they were shortened and thickened. In the subsequent 30 to 60 min, CM ruptures were formed in the regions devoid of intramembrane protein particles and in the pocket-like invaginations. After 24 h, complete disintegration of the intracellular membrane structures and conglomeration of the ribosomal part of the cytoplasm occurred. Similar changes were observed on the exposure of gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria to AHB. However, the cell wall in all the microorganisms studied was not destroyed, and in Micrococcusluteusit was even thickened. These mummified forms were preserved as morphologically intact but nonviable cells for more than three years of observations. By their ultrastructural characteristics, these mummified forms of microorganisms were similar to the fossilized microorganisms discovered by us in fibrous kerite. The concept of micromummies was formulated. AHB are supposed to play an important role in the process of fossilization of microorganisms in nature.
FEMS Microbiology Ecology | 2009
V. I. Duda; Nataliya E. Suzina; Tatiyana Z. Esikova; V. N. Akimov; Robert R. Oleinikov; Valentina N. Polivtseva; T. N. Abashina; A. P. Shorokhova; A. M. Boronin
Two strains (NF1 and NF3) of free-living chemoorganotrophic bacteria have been isolated from multiyear oil slime and Pedilanthus tithymaloides rhizosphere and ascribed to the genus Kaistia of the class Alphaproteobacteria on the basis of the nucleotide sequences of 16S rRNA gene and phenotypic characteristics. These strains can be assigned to ultramicrobacteria as their populations are represented by two subpopulations: (1) ultrasmall cells, on average 200-300 nm in diameter and <0.1 microm(3) in volume, of up to 60% of the total number of cells in a population, and (2) cells 400-800 nm in diameter and 0.15-0.5 microm(3) in volume, of up to 40% of the total number of cells in a population. The interaction of the isolated ultramicrobacteria strains (IUMB) with different bacterial species has been studied in cocultures grown under starvation and in complete nutrient media. It has been found that IUMB can be facultative parasites on certain species of chemoorganotrophic and phototrophic bacteria. The interaction of IUMB with prey bacteria exhibits the extracellular type of parasitism and involves establishing stable cell-cell contacts between the parasites and their prey to cause destruction of host cells.
Microbiology | 2011
N. E. Suzina; V. I. Duda; T. Z. Esikova; A. P. Shorokhova; A. B. Gafarov; R. R. Oleinikov; V. N. Akimov; T. N. Abashina; V. N. Polivtseva; A. M. Boronin
Two strains, NF4 and NF5, of a yellow-colored gram-negative bacterium were isolated from sediments of Lake Baikal and from old oil sludge of the Nizhnekamsk oil-processing plant. The cells of the strains are ultrasmall coccoids or short rods, measuring 0.2–0.4 × 0.2–0.5 μm; the average cell volume ranges from 0.004 to 0.04 μm3. A considerable proportion (30–60%) of cells have nanometer dimensions (180–300 nm in diameter and 0.004–0.02 μm3 in volume). The new isolates are thus among the smallest representatives of presently known free-living ultramicrobacteria. The two studied isolates are gram-negative nonmotile cells possessing a pronounced outer membrane. The cells do not have flagella and are not capable of gliding motility. They divide by constriction, budding, and multiple septation. The multiplicity of reproduction mechanisms results in a high degree of cell polymorphism. The isolates are chemoorganotrophic, aerobic, psychrotolerant, oxidase- and catalase-positive. Their characteristic trait is the absence of extracellular hydrolytic enzymes, such as proteases, lipases, pectinases, and cellulases. Menaquinone MK-6 is the main respiratory quinone; the flexirubin pigment was not detected. The G + C contents of the DNA of strains NF4 and NF5 are 40.8 and 40.5 mol %, respectively. The DNA-DNA hybridization level of strains NF4 and NF5 was close to 100%. Analysis of the 16S rRNA gene sequences and the fatty acid compositions showed that the isolates are most closely related to certain representatives of the genus Chryseobacterium (C. solincola, C. antarcticum, and C. jeonii). However, the differences in the 16S rRNA gene sequences, as well as in the phenotypic properties, such as formation of ultrasmall cells, the absence of extracellular hydrolases, oligotrophy, and the capacity for epibiosis on bacterial cells, suggest that the studied strains belong to a new species of the genus Chryseobacterium. The capacity for epibiosis, i.e., the ability to exist in a tightly adhered state on the surfaces of host Bacillus subtilis cells, is a peculiar trait of the studied isolates. It is assumed that adhesion of the cells of strains NF4 and NF5 (members of the phylum Bacteroidetes) occurs via by the same unique mechanism as the mechanism that we previously described for representatives of Alphaproteobacteria (Kaistia sp., NF1, and NF3), which use polysaccharide chains equipped with sticky granules as trapping and constricting cords.
Microbiology | 2005
V. I. Duda; V. N. Danilevich; V. N. Akimov; N. E. Suzina; V. V. Dmitriev; A. P. Shorokhova
The yeasts Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Pichia pastoris and the bacteria Micrococcus luteus, Bacillus subtilis, and Anaerobacter polyendosporus have been treated with the chaotropic agents guanidine hydrochloride and guanidine thiocyanate and certain detergents and studied using fluorescence microscopy. Studies with the use of fluorochromes that can selectively stain nucleic acids (diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI), propidium iodide, and acridine orange) show that treatment of the bacterial and yeast cells at 37°C for 3–5 h induces a release of DNA from the cytoplasm and its accumulation in the cellular zone, known as ectoplasm, located between the cell wall and the remainder of the cytoplasm (called endoplasm) in the form of one or several large granules. After treating the cells with the chaotropic agents at 100°C for 5–6 min, the DNA is diffusively distributed over the ectoplasm. The fluorochromes used do not allow the detection of RNA. These findings are in agreement with previous data obtained from electron microscopic study of thin cell sections. After 33 PCR cycles, a considerable portion of DNA leaves the cells; as a result, they show a low level of diffusive fluorescence when stained with DAPI. When endospores of B. subtilis are treated with the chaotropic agents, they become highly permeable to the fluorochromes. Fluorescence microscopic study of such endospores shows that they contain DNA in the central part of their cores.
Applied Biochemistry and Microbiology | 2015
N. E. Suzina; T. Z. Esikova; R. R. Oleinikov; A. B. Gafarov; A. P. Shorokhova; V. N. Polivtseva; D. V. Ross; T. N. Abashina; V. I. Duda; A. M. Boronin
We isolated 50 strains of free-living ultrasmall bacteria with a cell volume that varies from 0.02 to 1.3 μm3 from a range of natural biotopes, namely permafrost soils, oil slime, soils, lake silt, thermal swamp moss, and the skin integuments of the clawed frog, Xenopus laevis. Of them, 23 isolates, characterized by a cell size of less than 0.1 μm3 and a genome size from 1.5 to 2.4 Mb, were subsumed to ultramicrobacteria belonging to different philogenetic groups (Alphaproteobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Actinobacteria) and genera (Kaistia, Chryseobacterium, Microbacterium, Leucobacter, Leifsonia, and Agrococcus) of the Bacteria domain. They are free-living mesophilic heterotrophic aerobic bacteria. The representatives of Kaistia and Chryseobacterium genera were capable of facultative parasitism on other species of chemo-organotrophic bacteria and cyanobacteria. The ultramicrobacteria differed in their morpholgy, cell ultrastructural organization, and physiological and biochemical features. According to the fine structure of their cell walls, the isolates were subdivided into two groups, namely Gram-positive and Gram-negative forms.
Microbiology | 2014
V. I. Duda; N. E. Suzina; V. N. Polivtseva; A. B. Gafarov; A. P. Shorokhova; A. V. Machulin
The number of spores formed in a single cell of Anaerobacter polyendosporus PS-1T is significantly influenced by the composition of nutrient media. Depending on carbohydrate concentration in synthetic medium, the number of spores may vary from one or two to as many as five to seven. Investigation of spore formation process by fluorescence and electron microscopy revealed that on media with 0.5–1.0% glucose or galactose most of vegetative cells remained rod-shaped after cessation of cell division in the culture. The nucleoids of these cells were localized at cell poles close to the polar site of the cytoplasmic membrane. Fore-spores were formed at one or both of these poles. A satellite nucleoid (operator) was observed close to each forespore. In the variant with bipolar organization of mother cells, only one or two spores per cell were formed. In the second variant of culture development, when the cells were grown at low galactose concentrations (0.1–0.3%), most of vegetative cells increased in volume and became oval or spherical after cessation of cell division in the culture. Epifluorescence microscopy with nucleic acid-specific fluorochromes (DAPI and acridine orange) revealed the presence of multiple (six to nine) nucleoids in these cells. The nucleoids were located at the cell periphery in close contact with the cytoplasmic membrane. These nucleoids became the centers (poles) for forespore formation. Thus, in the early stationary phase transversion from bipolar to multipolar cells occurred. Cessation of cell division combined with continuing replication of the nucleoids resulted in formation on multinuclear cells. The multiplicity of nucleoides and multipolarity of these cells were prerequisites determining endogenous polysporogenesis, occurring as synchronous formation of three to seven twin spores in many of the oval and spherical cells.
Microbiology | 2018
N. E. Suzina; D. V. Ross; A. P. Shorokhova; T. N. Abashina; V. N. Polivtseva; T. Z. Esikova; A. V. Machulin; A. L. Mulyukin; V. I. Duda
A bacterial strain (FM3) that is closely related to Stenotrophomonas acidaminiphila and S. maltophilia, was isolated from the skin surface of the frog Xenopus laevis. Cytophysiological studies on vegetative cells and cyst-like cells (CLCs) that were obtained in model experiments addressed the dynamics of transition of vegetative cells to the dormant state and their reversion to vegetative growth. The ultrastructural organization of the vegetative and dormant cells of strain FM3 possesses unique properties. Cultures that developed after inoculating vegetative cells were characterized by: (1) resistance to physical factors and sterilization procedures; (2) high antimicrobial activity with respect to some gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria; (3) resistance to polypeptide antibiotics; (4) the presence of an easily detaching S-layer on the cell surface; (5) the ability to secret outer membrane vesicles into the intercellular space; and (6) formation of S-layerderived tubular structures associated with outer membrane vesicles that are regularly arranged within the tubes. Dormant cells were characterized by: (1) resistance to dehydration; (2) resistance to high temperatures; and (3) the preservation of the S-layer on the surface of cystlike cells (CLCs). Depending on experimental conditions, strain FM3 formed three CLC morphotypes, which differed in their abundance and ultrastructural organization. The experimental conditions used for CLC formation approximated those under which bacteria survive in hospitals. A model of intermicrobial parasitism is suggested that applies to motile FM3 cells during the development of their populations (cultures).
Microbiology | 2017
A. P. Shorokhova; N. E. Suzina; V. N. Polivtseva; T. Z. Esikova; D. V. Ross; V. P. Kholodenko; T. N. Abashina; V. I. Duda; A. M. Boronin
The effect of ultramicrobacterial epibionts of the genera Kaistia (strain NF1), Chryseobacterium (strain NF4), and Stenotrophomonas (strain FM3) on the process of sporulation of Bacillus subtilis ATCC 6633 was studied. The investigated strains of ultramicrobacteria (UMB) were found to inhibit the sporulation process of B. subtilis ATCC 6633 in binary mixed cultures, exhibiting a 3-day delay of the onset of sporulation compared to the control one, an extended period of the prospore maturation, formation of the fraction of immature spores, and development of ultrastructural defects in many endospores. Thus, investigation of binary mixed cultures of B. subtilis and UMB revealed that, apart from suppression of reproduction and lysis of host vegetative cells, inhibition of spore formation and destruction of endospores was yet another feature of intermicrobial parasitism. The UMB parasites of the studied genera are assumed to participate in the regulation of development and reproduction of B. subtilis in natural habitats of this spore-forming bacterium.