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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, February 2000, p. 509-517, Vol. 66, No. 2
Laboratoire de Microbiologie Alimentaire et
Biotechnologie, ENSSTAB, Université Bordeaux I, 33405 Talence,1 COBIOTEX, 53960 Bonchamp Les
Laval,2 and Groupe Membranes et
Osmorégulation, CNRS UPRES-A 6026, Université Rennes I,
Campus de Beaulieu, 35042 Rennes,3 France
Received 29 July 1999/Accepted 5 November 1999
Natural-abundance 13C-nuclear magnetic resonance was
used to probe the intracellular organic solute content of the
moderately halophilic bacterium Tetragenococcus halophila.
When grown in complex growth media supplemented or not with NaCl,
T. halophila accumulates glycine betaine and carnitine.
Unlike other moderate halophiles, T. halophila was not able
to produce potent osmoprotectants (such as ectoines and glycine
betaine) through de novo synthesis when cultured in defined medium
under hyperosmotic constraint. Addition of 2 mM carnitine, glycine
betaine, or choline to defined medium improved growth parameters, not
only at high salinity (up to 2.5 M NaCl) but also in media lacking
NaCl. These compounds were taken up when available in the surrounding
medium. The transport activity occurred at low and high salinities and
seems to be constitutive. Glycine betaine and carnitine were
accumulated by T. halophila in an unmodified form, while
exogenously provided choline led to an intracellular accumulation of
glycine betaine. This is the first evidence of the existence of a
choline-glycine betaine pathway in a lactic acid bacterium. An assay
showed that the compatible solutes strikingly repressed the
accumulation of glutamate and slightly increased the intracellular
potassium level only at high salinity. Interestingly,
osmoprotectant-treated cells were able to maintain the intracellular
sodium concentration at a relatively constant level (200 to 300 nmol/mg
[dry weight]), independent of the NaCl concentration of the medium.
In contrast, in the absence of osmoprotectant, the intracellular sodium
content increased sharply from 200 to 2,060 nmol/mg (dry weight) when
the salinity of the medium was raised from 1 to 2 M. Indeed, the
imported compatible solutes play an actual role in regulating the
intracellular Na+ content and confer a much higher salt
tolerance to T. halophila.
0099-2240/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Glycine Betaine, Carnitine, and Choline Enhance
Salinity Tolerance and Prevent the Accumulation of Sodium to a Level
Inhibiting Growth of Tetragenococcus halophila
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Groupe Membranes
et Osmorégulation, CNRS UPRES-A 6026, Université Rennes I,
Campus de Beaulieu, 35042 Rennes, France. Phone: (33) 2 99 28 61 41. Fax: (33) 2 99 28 61 40. E-mail:
Mohamed.Jebbar{at}univ-rennes1.fr.
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