BACILLUS SUBTILIS
selling culture microbe Bacillus subtillis
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Bacillus subtilis, known also as the hay bacillus or grass bacillus, is a
Gram-positive, catalase-positive bacterium, found in soil and the
gastrointestinal tract of ruminants and humans. A member of the genus Bacillus,
B. subtilis is rod-shaped, and can form a tough, protective endospore, allowing
it to tolerate extreme environmental conditions. B. subtilis has historically
been classified as an obligate aerobe, though evidence exists that it is a
facultative aerobe. B. subtilis is considered the best studied Gram-positive
bacterium and a model organism to study bacterial chromosome replication and
cell differentiation. It is one of the bacterial champions in secreted enzyme
production and used on an industrial scale by biotechnology companies.
Bacillus subtilis is a Gram-positive bacterium, rod-shaped and
catalase-positive. It was originally named Vibrio subtilis by Christian
Gottfried Ehrenberg,[3] and renamed Bacillus subtilis by Ferdinand Cohn in
1872[4] (subtilis being the Latin for 'fine'). B. subtilis cells are typically
rod-shaped, and are about 4-10 micrometers (μm) long and 0.25–1.0 μm in
diameter, with a cell volume of about 4.6 fL at stationary phase.[5] As with
other members of the genus Bacillus, it can form an endospore, to survive
extreme environmental conditions of temperature and desiccation.[6] B. subtilis
is a facultative anaerobe[7] and had been considered as an obligate aerobe
until 1998. B. subtilis is heavily flagellated, which gives it the ability to
move quickly in liquids. B. subtilis has proven highly amenable to genetic
manipulation, and has become widely adopted as a model organism for laboratory
studies, especially of sporulation, which is a simplified example of cellular
differentiation. In terms of popularity as a laboratory model organism, B.
subtilis is often considered as the Gram-positive equivalent of Escherichia
coli, an extensively studied Gram-negative bacterium.
This species is commonly found in the upper layers of the soil, and
evidence exists that B. subtilis is a normal gut commensal in humans. A 2009
study compared the density of spores found in soil (about 106 spores per gram)
to that found in human feces (about 104 spores per gram). The number of spores
found in the human gut was too high to be attributed solely to consumption
through food contamination.
B. subtilis can divide symmetrically to make two daughter cells (binary
fission), or asymmetrically, producing a single endospore that can remain
viable for decades and is resistant to unfavourable environmental conditions
such as drought, salinity, extreme pH, radiation, and solvents. The endospore
is formed at times of nutritional stress, allowing the organism to persist in
the environment until conditions become favourable. Prior to the process of
sporulation the cells might become motile by producing flagella, take up DNA
from the environment, or produce antibiotics. These responses are viewed as
attempts to seek out nutrients by seeking a more favourable environment,
enabling the cell to make use of new beneficial genetic material or simply by
killing of competition.
Under stressful conditions, such as nutrient deprivation, B. subtilis
undergoes the process of sporulation. This process has been very well studied
and has served as a model organism for studying sporulation. B. subtilis is a
model organism used to study bacterial chromosome replication. Replication of
the single circular chromosome initiates at a single locus, the origin (oriC).
Replication proceeds bidirectionally and two replication forks progress in
clockwise and counterclockwise directions along the chromosome. Chromosome
replication is completed when the forks reach the terminus region, which is
positioned opposite to the origin on the chromosome map. The terminus region
contains several short DNA sequences (Ter sites) that promote replication
arrest. Specific proteins mediate all the steps in DNA replication. Comparison
between the proteins involved in chromosomal DNA replication in B. subtilis and
in Escherichia coli reveals similarities and differences. Although the basic
components promoting initiation, elongation, and termination of replication are
well-conserved, some important differences can be found (such as one bacterium
missing proteins essential in the other). These differences underline the
diversity in the mechanisms and strategies that various bacterial species have
adopted to carry out the duplication of their genomes.
B. subtilis has about 4,100 genes. Of these, only 192 were shown to be
indispensable; another 79 were predicted to be essential, as well. A vast
majority of essential genes were categorized in relatively few domains of cell
metabolism, with about half involved in information processing, one-fifth
involved in the synthesis of cell envelope and the determination of cell shape
and division, and one-tenth related to cell energetics.
The complete genome sequence of B. subtilis sub-strain QB928 has
4,146,839 DNA base pairs and 4,292 genes. The QB928 strain is widely used in
genetic studies due to the presence of various markers [aroI(aroK)906 purE1
dal(alrA)1 trpC2]. Several noncoding RNAs have been characterized in the B.
subtilis genome in 2009, including Bsr RNAs.[13] Microarray-based comparative
genomic analyses have revealed that B. subtilis members show considerable
genomic diversity.
Natural bacterial transformation involves the transfer of DNA from one
bacterium to another through the surrounding medium. In B. subtilis, length of
transferred DNA is greater than 1271 kb (more than 1 million bases).[15] The
transferred DNA is likely double-stranded DNA and is often more than a third of
the total chromosome length of 4215 kb.[16] It appears that about 7-9% of the
recipient cells take up an entire chromosome.
In order for a recipient bacterium to bind, take up exogenous DNA from
another bacterium of the same species and recombine it into its chromosome, it
must enter a special physiological state called competence. Competence in B.
subtilis is induced toward the end of logarithmic growth, especially under
conditions of amino-acid limitation.[18] Under these stressful conditions of
semistarvation, cells typically have just one copy of their chromosome and
likely have increased DNA damage. To test whether transformation is an adaptive
function for B. subtilis to repair its DNA damage, experiments were conducted
using UV light as the damaging agent.[19][20][21] These experiments led to the
conclusion that competence, with uptake of DNA, is specifically induced by DNA-damaging
conditions, and that transformation functions as a process for recombinational
repair of DNA damage.[22]
Cultures of B. subtilis were popular worldwide before the introduction of
antibiotics as an immunostimulatory agent to aid treatment of gastrointestinal
and urinary tract diseases. It was used throughout the 1950s as an alternative
medicine, which upon digestion has been found to significantly stimulate
broad-spectrum immune activity including activation of secretion of specific
antibodies IgM, IgG and IgA[23] and release of CpG dinucleotides inducing INF
A/Y producing activity of leukocytes and cytokines important in the development
of cytotoxicity towards tumor cells.[24] It was marketed throughout America and
Europe from 1946 as an immunostimulatory aid in the treatment of gut and
urinary tract diseases such as Rotavirus and Shigellosis.
Since the 1960s B. subtilis has had a history as a test species in
spaceflight experimentation. Its endospores can survive up to 6 years in space
if coated by dust particles protecting it from solar UV rays.[25]* It has been
used as an extremophile survival indicator in outer space such as Exobiology
Radiation Assembly, EXOSTACK, and EXPOSE orbital missions.
Wild-type natural isolates of B. subtilis are difficult to work with
compared to laboratory strains that have undergone domestication processes of
mutagenesis and selection. These strains often have improved capabilities of
transformation (uptake and integration of environmental DNA), growth, and loss
of abilities needed "in the wild". And, while dozens of different
strains fitting this description exist, the strain designated '168' is the most
widely used.[citation needed]
B. globigii, a closely related but phylogenetically distinct species now
known as Bacillus atrophaeus[33][34] was used as a biowarfare simulant during
Project SHAD (aka Project 112).[35] Subsequent genomic analysis showed that the
strains used in those studies were products of deliberate enrichment for
strains that exhibited abnormally high rates of sporulation. A strain of B.
subtilis formerly known as Bacillus natto is used in the commercial production
of the Japanese food nattō, as well as the similar Korean food cheonggukjang.
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