Mathematics – Logic
Scientific paper
Apr 2003
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2003eaeja.....1003m&link_type=abstract
EGS - AGU - EUG Joint Assembly, Abstracts from the meeting held in Nice, France, 6 - 11 April 2003, abstract #1003
Mathematics
Logic
Scientific paper
Gaining insight into strategies and mechanisms that ensure long term-preservation of microorganisms in various environments, including cold habitats, is a very important issue for terrestrial biogeoscience and astrobiology. This communication has a focus on the analysis of the published and our experimental data regarding the dormant state of different microorganisms, with an emphasis on non-spore-forming bacteria, which are widely spread in numerous ecological niches (e.g. permafrost sediments). Albeit it is recognized that one of the strategies to endure environmental stresses is entering of non-spore-forming bacteria into the viable-but-non-culturable state, a question of whether these microorganisms have the resting stage remains unclear. However, our previous studies showed that non-spore-forming bacteria and yeast could form cyst-like cells that possess many attributes of constitutively resting cells. As applied to the survival strategy of non-spore-forming bacteria in permafrost sediments, recognizing a very important role of the viable-but-nonculturable state in asporogenous bacteria, we however believe that their long-term maintenance in such habitats is due to the formation of cyst-like cells. Interestingly, bacterial isolates from permafrost sediments showed a greater productivity of autoregulatory factors, favoring the transition of cells into the resting state, and a more elevated resistance to some stresses than closely related collection strains. This suggests a greater potentiality of the permafrost isolates to enter the resting stage and thereby to survive for millennia years in natural habitats. However, it is known that only a little part of microorganisms that are present in environmental samples can be enumerated by standard plating on agar media, and a discrepancy between the total number of cells and those capable of forming colonies is a rather common case. Such a discrepancy can be due to either the actual non-culturability of microbial cells and to that the conditions that are most appropriate to wake resting cells to growth are unknown to microbiologists. Furthermore, resting bacterial cells of just the same species differ in their ability to recover the growth and multiplication and profundity of the dormant state, so special 'reanimation' procedures are required. To overcome obstacles due to an expectable underestimation of total cell number in the environmental samples, it is important to find out the criteria, which allow one to distinguish between microbial cells of different physiological state, including the resting cells, by direct methods. Some of such approaches to revealing the specific features of potentially viable resting cells (in laboratory cultures) were developed in our works and used for a primary detection of microbial cells in situ and for appraisal of their physiological state. So, it is worth to discuss what we can propose for a better understanding of the phenomenon of long-term preservation of microorganisms in cold terrestrial ecosystems and whether resting cells of non-spore-forming-bacteria can be regarded as a target in exobiological explorations.
No associations
LandOfFree
Dormant state in bacteria: Conceptions and implications for terrestrial biogeoscience and astrobiology does not yet have a rating. At this time, there are no reviews or comments for this scientific paper.
If you have personal experience with Dormant state in bacteria: Conceptions and implications for terrestrial biogeoscience and astrobiology, we encourage you to share that experience with our LandOfFree.com community. Your opinion is very important and Dormant state in bacteria: Conceptions and implications for terrestrial biogeoscience and astrobiology will most certainly appreciate the feedback.
Profile ID: LFWR-SCP-O-841301