Energy content decrease and viable-not-culturable status induced by oxygenlimitation coupled to the presence of nitrogen oxides in Rhizobium "hedysari"
A. Toffanin et al., Energy content decrease and viable-not-culturable status induced by oxygenlimitation coupled to the presence of nitrogen oxides in Rhizobium "hedysari", BIOL FERT S, 31(6), 2000, pp. 484-488
Rhizobium "hedysari" HCNT1 and Sinorhizobium meliloti 41 were investigated
and compared for their ability to shift from a typical aerobic, growth-supp
orting metabolism to O-2-limiting, low-energy-expending, basal activities.
Such metabolic conversion leads bacteria to stop reproduction although allo
ws them to survive. Once anaerobic, both rhizobia started to consume their
internal energy budget and most of the cells remained metabolically active
for a long time, as revealed by microscope-based analyses. However, althoug
h R. "hedysari" HCNT1 also maintained the same number of culturable cells,
S. meliloti 41 started to reduce this number almost immediately when anaero
bic incubation took place. In the presence of NO2- the ability of R. "hedys
ari" HCNT1 to restore normal growth reduced drastically. A mutant strain, p
reviously obtained by inactivation of the gene encoding nitrite reductase (
nirK), did not burn up internal adenosine triphosphate when exposed to the
same O-2-limiting conditions in the presence of NO2-. This finding indicate
d that NO2--reduction activity in the wild type strain, HCNT1, results in a
decrease in cell energy content and culturability. Therefore, R. "hedysari
" HCNT1 and S. meliloti 41 follow different paths to reduce the internal en
ergy pool towards the so-called viable-not-culturable state that can be rea
ched within a relatively large interval of internal energy charge, dependin
g upon the bacterial strain.