Fig. 5
From: Compatible solutes determine the heat resistance of conidia

Effect of internal compatible solute composition on heat resistance of conidia. Measurements were performed in biological triplicates. a, Internal compatible solute composition of conidia from knock-out strains determined by HPLC analysis. Conidia from the ΔmpdA, ΔtpsABC strain contained no measurable trehalose and very little mannitol (significantly different from wild type p < 0.05 tested with Student’s t-test). The four-fold and five-fold knock-out strains were complemented back to wild type by reintroducing the genes containing two silent point mutations at the original loci. These strains show a restored compatible solute composition and conidial heat resistance comparable to wild type conidia. The five-fold knock-out strain with only the mtdB gene restored, re-introduces the low compatible solute composition profile. b, Survival plates showing CFUs of conidia from compatible solute mutants after heat treatment. Zero colonies were found testing the conidia of a ΔmpdA, ΔtpsABC strain after a relatively mild heat stress of 55 °C was applied, correlating with absent trehalose and a low mannitol concentration. c, Heat inactivation curves of conidia from compatible solute knock-out strains. Conidia of these strains were subjected to heat stress in a heat bath at 54 °C and sampled for up to 60 min. Mean values of three biological replicates are shown; standard deviations are indicated by error bars. D-values were calculated based on linear regression (Table 1)