6
Most read
16
Most read
21
Most read
SPORES
(endospores)
the spore is formed inside the
parent vegetative cell – hence the
name „endospores“
The spore is a dehydrated, multishelled
structure that protects and allows the
bacteria to exist in „suspended
animation“.
It contains a complete copy of the
chromosome, the bare minimum
concentrations of essential proteins and
ribosomes, and a high concentration of
calcium bound to dipicolinic acid.
Members of several bacterial
genera are capable of forming
endospores:
Bacillus anthracis
Clostridium tetani
Clostridium botulinum
Clostridium perfringens
and other, but never gram-negative
microbes
Spore formation is a means by which
some bacteria are able to survive
extremly harsh environmental conditions.
The genetic material of the bacterial cells
is concentrated and than surrounded by a
protective coat, rendering the cell
impervious to desiccation, heat and many
chemical agents.
 The bacteria in the stage of spore is metabolically inert
and can remain stable for months to years. When
exposed to favorable conditions, germination can
occur, with the production of single cell that
subsenquently can undergo normal replication.
 It should be obvious that the complete eradication of
disease caused by spore-forming microorganisms is
difficult or impossible.
 The two major groups of bacteria that form spores are
the aerobic genus Bacillus (e.g. disease anthrax) and
the anaerobic genus Clostridium (e.g. disease tetanus,
botulinismus).
Sporulation
The sporulation process begins when
nutritional conditions become
unfavorable, depletion of the nitrogen or
carbon source (or both) being the most
significant factor.
Sporulation occurs massively in cultures
that have terminated exponential growth
as a result of such depletion.
 Sporulation involves the production of many new
structures, enzymes, and metabolites along with the
disappearance of many vegetative cell components.
– These changes represent a true process of differentiation.
A series of genes whose products determine the
formation and final composition of the spore are actived,
while another series of genes involved in vegetative cell
function are inactivated.
– These changes involve alterations in the transcriptional
specifity of RNA polymerase, which is determined by the
association of the polymerase core protein with one or
another promoter-specific protein called a sigma factor.
Different sigma factors are produced during vegetative
growth and sporulation.
Sporulation
 Morphologically, sporulation begins with the
isolation of a terminal nucleus by the inward
growth of the cell membrane.
 The growth process involves an infolding of
the membrane so as to produce a double
membrane structure whose facing surfaces
correspond to the cell wall-synthesizing
surface of the cell envelope. The growing
points move progressively toward the pole of
the cell so as to engulf the developing spore.
Sporulation
 The two spore membranes now engage in the
activity synthesis of special layer that will
form the cell envelope:
– the spore wall and cortex, lying between the
facing membranes, and the coat and exosporium
lying outside the facing membrane.
 In the newly isolated cytoplasm, or core,
many vegetative cell enzymes are degraded
and are replaced by a set of unique spore
constituents.
Properties
of
endospores
Core
 The core is the spore protoplast.
 It contains a complete nucleus (chromosome), all of
the components of the proteins-synthetizing apparatus,
and an energy-generating system based on glycolysis.
Cytochromes are lacking even in aerobic species, the
spores of which rely on shorted electron transport
pathway involving flavoproteins. A number of
vegetative cell enzymes are increased in amount (eg.
alanine racemase), and a number of unique enzymes
are formed (eg. dipicolinic acid synthetase).
 The energy for germination is stored as 3-
phosphoglycerate rather than as ATP.
Core
 The heat resistance of spores is due in part to their
dehydrated state and in part to the presence in the
core of large amounts (5 – 15% of the spore dry
weight) of calcium dipicolinate, which is formed
from an intermediate of the the lysine biosynthetic
pathway.
 In some way not yet understood, these properties
result in the stabilization of the spore enzymes,
most of which exhibit normal heat lability when
isolated soluble form.
Spore wall
The innermost layer surrounding the
inner spore membrane is called the spore
wall.
It contains normal peptidoglycan and
becomes the cell wall of the germinating
vegetative cell.
Cortex
 The cortex is the thickest layer of the spore
envelope.
 It contains an unusual type of peptidoglycan,
with many fewer cross-links than are found
in cell wall peptidoglycan.
 Cortex peptidoglycan is extremly sensitive to
lysozyme, and its autolysis plays a key role
in spore germination.
Coat
The coat is composed of a keratin-like
protein containing many intramolecular
disulfide bonds.
The impermeability of this layer confers
on spores their relative resistance to
antibacteral chemical agents.
Exosporium
The exosporium is a lipoprotein
membrane containing some
carbohydrate.
Germination
The germination process occurs
in three stages:
–activation,
–initiation,
–outgrowth.
Activation
 Even when placed in an environment that
favors germination (eg. nutritionally rich
medium) bacterial spores will not germinate
unless first activated by one or another agent
that damages the spore coat.
 Among the agents that can overcome spore
dormancy are heat, abrasion, acidity, and
componds containing free sulfhydryl groups.
Initiation
 Once activated, a spore will initiate germination if
the environmental conditions are favorable.
 Different species have evolved receptors recognise
different effectors as signaling a rich medium.
 Binding of the effector activates an autolysin that
rapidly degrades the cortex peptidoglycan. Water is
taken up, calcium dipicolinate is released, and a
variety of spore constituents are degraded by
hydrolytic enzymes.
Outgrowth
 Degradation of the cortex and outer layers results in
the emergence of a new vegetative cell consisting
of the spore protoplast with its surrounding wall.
 A period of active biosynthesis follows. This
period, which terminates in cell division, is called
outgrowth.
 Outgrowh requires a supply of all nutrients essenial
for cell growth.
The spore stain
 Spores are most simply observed as intracellular
refractile bodies in unstained cell suspensions or as
colorless areas in cell stained by conventional
methods.
 The spore wall is relatively impermeable, but dyes can
be made to penetrate it by haeting the preparation.
 The same inpermeability then serves to prevent
decolorization of the spore by a period of alcohol
treatment sufficient to decolorize vegetative cells. The
latter can finnaly be counterstained. Spores are
commonly stained with malachite green or
carbolfuchsin.

More Related Content

PPTX
Endospore
PPT
Endospores
PPT
Growth curve of bacteria and factors effect bacterial growth curve
PPTX
Parasitic taxonomy
PPTX
Morphology and life cycle of leishmania donovani
PPTX
Differential staining
PPT
Fungi-Molds and Yeasts
PPTX
Methanogens
Endospore
Endospores
Growth curve of bacteria and factors effect bacterial growth curve
Parasitic taxonomy
Morphology and life cycle of leishmania donovani
Differential staining
Fungi-Molds and Yeasts
Methanogens

What's hot (20)

PDF
Bacterial taxonomy
PPTX
Skin microflora / Normal Flora of Skin
PPTX
Classification and reproduction of fungi
PPTX
Flagella Dr.Ashna Ajimsha
PPTX
Flagella
PPTX
Dermatophytes .pptx
PPTX
PPTX
Viral diseases
PPTX
Normal Microflora of Human body
PDF
Fimbriae and pili
PPTX
Wuchereria bancrofti
PPT
Bacterial growth
PDF
Nomenclature and classification of viruses
PPTX
Trichinella spiralis
PPTX
Virus - Structure and Classification
PPTX
Microbial taxonomy
PPTX
Tower Fermernter
PPTX
Halophile sfinal.pptx
PDF
Bacillus cereus - contamination in food
PPTX
Microbial taxonomy and classification system
Bacterial taxonomy
Skin microflora / Normal Flora of Skin
Classification and reproduction of fungi
Flagella Dr.Ashna Ajimsha
Flagella
Dermatophytes .pptx
Viral diseases
Normal Microflora of Human body
Fimbriae and pili
Wuchereria bancrofti
Bacterial growth
Nomenclature and classification of viruses
Trichinella spiralis
Virus - Structure and Classification
Microbial taxonomy
Tower Fermernter
Halophile sfinal.pptx
Bacillus cereus - contamination in food
Microbial taxonomy and classification system
Ad

Similar to Sporulation.ppt (20)

PPT
Spores web (3)
PPT
B.Sc Micro II Microbial Physiology Unit 4 Spores
PDF
Bacterial-Endosporesد حاتم البيطاررررر.pdf
PDF
Bacterial-ييييييييييييييييييييييEndospores.pdf
PPTX
Sporulation & morphogenesis
PPTX
Bacterial endospore
PDF
2.-Cell-structers.pdf
PPTX
3 morphology & cell biology of bacteria (2)
PDF
Bacteriology3.pdf
PPTX
Endospores and Sporogenesis in Microbes.pptx
PPTX
micropara.BACTERIA (2ND DISCUSSION).pptx
PPTX
Fundamental of bacterial cell morphology
PPTX
Morphology of bacteria ii
PPT
Bacterial Cell
PDF
Means of perrenation -sporulation-and-morphogenesis.pdf
PPTX
Sporulation in bacteria.pptx
PPTX
Morphology of bacterial cell presentation new 1.pptx
PPT
Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes
PPT
Prokaryotes _Eukaryotes
PPT
Bacteria---Introduction to bacteria.pptx
Spores web (3)
B.Sc Micro II Microbial Physiology Unit 4 Spores
Bacterial-Endosporesد حاتم البيطاررررر.pdf
Bacterial-ييييييييييييييييييييييEndospores.pdf
Sporulation & morphogenesis
Bacterial endospore
2.-Cell-structers.pdf
3 morphology & cell biology of bacteria (2)
Bacteriology3.pdf
Endospores and Sporogenesis in Microbes.pptx
micropara.BACTERIA (2ND DISCUSSION).pptx
Fundamental of bacterial cell morphology
Morphology of bacteria ii
Bacterial Cell
Means of perrenation -sporulation-and-morphogenesis.pdf
Sporulation in bacteria.pptx
Morphology of bacterial cell presentation new 1.pptx
Prokaryotes vs Eukaryotes
Prokaryotes _Eukaryotes
Bacteria---Introduction to bacteria.pptx
Ad

Recently uploaded (20)

PDF
Race Reva University – Shaping Future Leaders in Artificial Intelligence
PDF
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
PPTX
Climate Change and Its Global Impact.pptx
DOCX
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
PDF
FOISHS ANNUAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN 2025.pdf
PDF
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
PDF
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY- PART (1) WHO ARE WE.pdf
PDF
BP 505 T. PHARMACEUTICAL JURISPRUDENCE (UNIT 2).pdf
PDF
Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment .pdf
PDF
Environmental Education MCQ BD2EE - Share Source.pdf
PPTX
Core Concepts of Personalized Learning and Virtual Learning Environments
PDF
FORM 1 BIOLOGY MIND MAPS and their schemes
PDF
International_Financial_Reporting_Standa.pdf
PPTX
ELIAS-SEZIURE AND EPilepsy semmioan session.pptx
PPTX
Education and Perspectives of Education.pptx
PPTX
DRUGS USED FOR HORMONAL DISORDER, SUPPLIMENTATION, CONTRACEPTION, & MEDICAL T...
PDF
Vision Prelims GS PYQ Analysis 2011-2022 www.upscpdf.com.pdf
PPTX
What’s under the hood: Parsing standardized learning content for AI
PDF
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 1)
PPTX
Module on health assessment of CHN. pptx
Race Reva University – Shaping Future Leaders in Artificial Intelligence
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 2).pdf
Climate Change and Its Global Impact.pptx
Cambridge-Practice-Tests-for-IELTS-12.docx
FOISHS ANNUAL IMPLEMENTATION PLAN 2025.pdf
MBA _Common_ 2nd year Syllabus _2021-22_.pdf
LIFE & LIVING TRILOGY- PART (1) WHO ARE WE.pdf
BP 505 T. PHARMACEUTICAL JURISPRUDENCE (UNIT 2).pdf
Hazard Identification & Risk Assessment .pdf
Environmental Education MCQ BD2EE - Share Source.pdf
Core Concepts of Personalized Learning and Virtual Learning Environments
FORM 1 BIOLOGY MIND MAPS and their schemes
International_Financial_Reporting_Standa.pdf
ELIAS-SEZIURE AND EPilepsy semmioan session.pptx
Education and Perspectives of Education.pptx
DRUGS USED FOR HORMONAL DISORDER, SUPPLIMENTATION, CONTRACEPTION, & MEDICAL T...
Vision Prelims GS PYQ Analysis 2011-2022 www.upscpdf.com.pdf
What’s under the hood: Parsing standardized learning content for AI
BP 704 T. NOVEL DRUG DELIVERY SYSTEMS (UNIT 1)
Module on health assessment of CHN. pptx

Sporulation.ppt

  • 1. SPORES (endospores) the spore is formed inside the parent vegetative cell – hence the name „endospores“
  • 2. The spore is a dehydrated, multishelled structure that protects and allows the bacteria to exist in „suspended animation“. It contains a complete copy of the chromosome, the bare minimum concentrations of essential proteins and ribosomes, and a high concentration of calcium bound to dipicolinic acid.
  • 3. Members of several bacterial genera are capable of forming endospores: Bacillus anthracis Clostridium tetani Clostridium botulinum Clostridium perfringens and other, but never gram-negative microbes
  • 4. Spore formation is a means by which some bacteria are able to survive extremly harsh environmental conditions. The genetic material of the bacterial cells is concentrated and than surrounded by a protective coat, rendering the cell impervious to desiccation, heat and many chemical agents.
  • 5.  The bacteria in the stage of spore is metabolically inert and can remain stable for months to years. When exposed to favorable conditions, germination can occur, with the production of single cell that subsenquently can undergo normal replication.  It should be obvious that the complete eradication of disease caused by spore-forming microorganisms is difficult or impossible.  The two major groups of bacteria that form spores are the aerobic genus Bacillus (e.g. disease anthrax) and the anaerobic genus Clostridium (e.g. disease tetanus, botulinismus).
  • 6. Sporulation The sporulation process begins when nutritional conditions become unfavorable, depletion of the nitrogen or carbon source (or both) being the most significant factor. Sporulation occurs massively in cultures that have terminated exponential growth as a result of such depletion.
  • 7.  Sporulation involves the production of many new structures, enzymes, and metabolites along with the disappearance of many vegetative cell components. – These changes represent a true process of differentiation. A series of genes whose products determine the formation and final composition of the spore are actived, while another series of genes involved in vegetative cell function are inactivated. – These changes involve alterations in the transcriptional specifity of RNA polymerase, which is determined by the association of the polymerase core protein with one or another promoter-specific protein called a sigma factor. Different sigma factors are produced during vegetative growth and sporulation.
  • 8. Sporulation  Morphologically, sporulation begins with the isolation of a terminal nucleus by the inward growth of the cell membrane.  The growth process involves an infolding of the membrane so as to produce a double membrane structure whose facing surfaces correspond to the cell wall-synthesizing surface of the cell envelope. The growing points move progressively toward the pole of the cell so as to engulf the developing spore.
  • 9. Sporulation  The two spore membranes now engage in the activity synthesis of special layer that will form the cell envelope: – the spore wall and cortex, lying between the facing membranes, and the coat and exosporium lying outside the facing membrane.  In the newly isolated cytoplasm, or core, many vegetative cell enzymes are degraded and are replaced by a set of unique spore constituents.
  • 11. Core  The core is the spore protoplast.  It contains a complete nucleus (chromosome), all of the components of the proteins-synthetizing apparatus, and an energy-generating system based on glycolysis. Cytochromes are lacking even in aerobic species, the spores of which rely on shorted electron transport pathway involving flavoproteins. A number of vegetative cell enzymes are increased in amount (eg. alanine racemase), and a number of unique enzymes are formed (eg. dipicolinic acid synthetase).  The energy for germination is stored as 3- phosphoglycerate rather than as ATP.
  • 12. Core  The heat resistance of spores is due in part to their dehydrated state and in part to the presence in the core of large amounts (5 – 15% of the spore dry weight) of calcium dipicolinate, which is formed from an intermediate of the the lysine biosynthetic pathway.  In some way not yet understood, these properties result in the stabilization of the spore enzymes, most of which exhibit normal heat lability when isolated soluble form.
  • 13. Spore wall The innermost layer surrounding the inner spore membrane is called the spore wall. It contains normal peptidoglycan and becomes the cell wall of the germinating vegetative cell.
  • 14. Cortex  The cortex is the thickest layer of the spore envelope.  It contains an unusual type of peptidoglycan, with many fewer cross-links than are found in cell wall peptidoglycan.  Cortex peptidoglycan is extremly sensitive to lysozyme, and its autolysis plays a key role in spore germination.
  • 15. Coat The coat is composed of a keratin-like protein containing many intramolecular disulfide bonds. The impermeability of this layer confers on spores their relative resistance to antibacteral chemical agents.
  • 16. Exosporium The exosporium is a lipoprotein membrane containing some carbohydrate.
  • 17. Germination The germination process occurs in three stages: –activation, –initiation, –outgrowth.
  • 18. Activation  Even when placed in an environment that favors germination (eg. nutritionally rich medium) bacterial spores will not germinate unless first activated by one or another agent that damages the spore coat.  Among the agents that can overcome spore dormancy are heat, abrasion, acidity, and componds containing free sulfhydryl groups.
  • 19. Initiation  Once activated, a spore will initiate germination if the environmental conditions are favorable.  Different species have evolved receptors recognise different effectors as signaling a rich medium.  Binding of the effector activates an autolysin that rapidly degrades the cortex peptidoglycan. Water is taken up, calcium dipicolinate is released, and a variety of spore constituents are degraded by hydrolytic enzymes.
  • 20. Outgrowth  Degradation of the cortex and outer layers results in the emergence of a new vegetative cell consisting of the spore protoplast with its surrounding wall.  A period of active biosynthesis follows. This period, which terminates in cell division, is called outgrowth.  Outgrowh requires a supply of all nutrients essenial for cell growth.
  • 21. The spore stain  Spores are most simply observed as intracellular refractile bodies in unstained cell suspensions or as colorless areas in cell stained by conventional methods.  The spore wall is relatively impermeable, but dyes can be made to penetrate it by haeting the preparation.  The same inpermeability then serves to prevent decolorization of the spore by a period of alcohol treatment sufficient to decolorize vegetative cells. The latter can finnaly be counterstained. Spores are commonly stained with malachite green or carbolfuchsin.