6533b7d6fe1ef96bd1266615
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Unsaturated fatty acids from food and in the growth medium improve growth of Bacillus cereus under cold and anaerobic conditions.
Raphaëlle Tourdot-maréchalChristophe Nguyen-theChristophe Nguyen-theLaurent BeneyBenoit De SarrauThierry ClavelThierry ClavelJordane DespresJordane DespresSébastien DupontNicolas ZwickelNicolas Zwickelsubject
Membrane lipids[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]Bacillus cereusMicrobiology03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compoundBacillus cereusSpinacia oleraceaPhosphatidylcholineFood scienceAnaerobiosis030304 developmental biology2. Zero hungerchemistry.chemical_classification0303 health sciencesGrowth mediumbiology[ SDV ] Life Sciences [q-bio]030306 microbiologyfungiMembraneFatty acidbiology.organism_classificationFatty acidCulture MediaCold TemperatureChemically defined mediumCereuschemistryBiochemistryFatty Acids UnsaturatedFood MicrobiologySpinachFood ScienceColddescription
International audience; In a chemically defined medium and in Luria broth, cold strongly reduced maximal population density of Bacillus cereus ATCC 14579 in anaerobiosis and caused formation of filaments. In cooked spinach, maximal population density of B. cereus in anaerobiosis was the same at cold and optimal temperatures, with normal cell divisions. The lipid containing fraction of spinach, but not the hydrophilic fraction, restored growth of B. cereus under cold and anaerobiosis when added to the chemically defined medium. This fraction was rich in unsaturated, low melting point fatty acids. Addition of phosphatidylcholine containing unsaturated, low melting point, fatty acids similarly improved B. cereus anaerobic growth at cold temperature. Addition of hydrogenated phosphatidylcholine containing saturated, high melting point, fatty acids did not modify growth. Fatty acids from phospholipids, from spinach and from hy-drogenated phosphatidylcholine, although normally very rare in B. cereus, were inserted in the bacterium membrane. Addition of phospholipids rich in unsaturated fatty acids to cold and anaerobic cultures, increased fluidity of B. cereus membrane lipids, to the same level as those from B. cereus normally cold adapted, i.e. grown aerobically at 15 C. B. cereus is therefore able to use external fatty acids from foods or from the growth medium to adapt its membrane to cold temperature under anaerobiosis, and to recover the maximal population density achieved at optimal temperature.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2013-01-01 |