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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1978 August; 36(2): 230-236

Significance of the inactivation of transport in thermal death of Escherichia coli.

F H Grau

ABSTRACT

Cells of Escherichia coli ML308-225, harvested from the exponential phase, were heated in 50 mM potassium phosphate, and the loss in viability and inability to transport lactose, proline, and alpha-methylglucoside was compared. After cells were heated at 48 degrees C for 15 min, there was a 16% loss in viability and a similarly small reduction in the steady-state accumulation of lactose at 25 degrees C. The initial rates of lactose and proline transport were severely inhibited by heating at either 48 or 50 degrees C, but substantial recovery occurred within 5 to 7 min at 25 degrees C. Heating at 50 degrees C for 15 min caused an 86% loss in viability, but only a 53% decrease in the steady-state accumulation of lactose and only a 24% reduction in the initial rate of alpha-methylglucoside uptake. Twice as much alpha-methylglucoside was accumulated at 50 degrees C as at 25 degrees C. Although alpha-methylglucoside phosphate leaked from the cells at 50 degrees C, the concentration retained within the cells was about 500 times that externally, when only about 14% of the cells were viable. Overall, these results indicate that cells made nonviable by heating at 50 degrees C still have significant membrane integrity.


Appl Environ Microbiol. 1978 August; 36(2): 230-236







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