Current Microbiology, Vol.29, No.3, 163-169, 1994
EFFECT OF GLUCOSE ON SPORULATION AND EXTRACELLULAR AMYLASE PRODUCTION BY CLOSTRIDIUM-PERFRINGENS TYPE-A IN A DEFINED MEDIUM
The effect of glucose and other sugars on sporulation and extracellular amylase production by Clostridium perfringens NCTC 8679 type A in a defined medium was studied. Cells grown in the presence of glucose and mannose yielded the highest levels of amylase activity, while disaccharides such as lactose, maltose, and sucrose resulted in moderate amylase production. Little amylase activity was detected in the medium in the presence of ribose or galactose. The concentration of each sugar resulting in highest amylase production was between 6 and 10 mM except for fructose (25 mM). Levels of heat-resistant spores decreased as sugar concentrations increased. The addition of even small amounts of glucose to the medium before exponential growth suppressed sporulation but maximized amylase activity. The addition of glucose after the initiation of sporulation did not inhibit spore formation. However, its addition to 3-h amylase-producing cells did inhibit subsequent sporulation but promoted the continued excretion of amylase. The different response to glucose between sporulating cells and amylase-producing cells suggests that the mechanisms of catabolite repression of extracellular amylase production and sporulation are distinct in this strain of C. perfringens.