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Spore Cortex Hydrolysis Precedes Dipicolinic Acid Release during Clostridium difficile Spore Germination.

Michael B FrancisCharlotte A AllenJoseph A Sorg
Published in: Journal of bacteriology (2015)
Clostridium difficile infects antibiotic-treated hosts and spreads between hosts as a dormant spore. In a host, spores germinate to the vegetative form that produces the toxins necessary for disease. C. difficile spore germination is stimulated by certain bile acids and glycine. We recently identified the bile acid germinant receptor as the germination-specific, protease-like CspC. CspC is likely cortex localized, where it can transmit the bile acid signal to the cortex hydrolase, SleC. Due to the differences in location of CspC compared to the Bacillus subtilis germinant receptors, we hypothesized that there are fundamental differences in the germination processes between the model organism and C. difficile. We found that C. difficile spore germination proceeds through a novel pathway.
Keyphrases
  • clostridium difficile
  • bacillus subtilis
  • plant growth
  • functional connectivity
  • binding protein
  • anaerobic digestion