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. 1984 Apr;130(4):747-55.
doi: 10.1099/00221287-130-4-747.

Peptide antibiotics and sporulation: induction of sporulation in asporogenous and peptide-negative mutants of Bacillus brevis

Peptide antibiotics and sporulation: induction of sporulation in asporogenous and peptide-negative mutants of Bacillus brevis

B Modest et al. J Gen Microbiol. 1984 Apr.

Abstract

Mutants of Bacillus brevis ATCC 8185 were isolated which were unable to produce detectable amounts of either tyrocidine or linear gramicidin, or both peptide antibiotics. Tyrocidine-negative mutants (BM5, BM21, BM44) sporulated normally. Gramicidin-negative mutants (BM2, BM24) were oligosporogenous, and mutants unable to produce both peptides (S18, S19) were asporogenous. Addition of tyrocidine and/or gramicidin to asporogenous mutants in rich medium did not stimulate sporulation. However, these mutants formed normal spores after being transferred to nitrogen-free medium and upon the addition of tyrocidine. It was demonstrated that nutrient broth has a suppressive effect on tyrocidine-induced sporulation of S18. The tyrocidine-negative mutant BM44, sporogenous in rich medium, could sporulate under nitrogen deprivation only if supplemented with tyrocidine. The significance of the peptide antibiotics for a regulatory role in sporogenesis of B. brevis is discussed.

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