Abstract
Pollution from toxic spores has caused us a lot of problems, because
spores are extremely resistant and can survive most disinfectants.
Therefore, the detection of spore response to disinfectant is of great
significance for the development of effective decontamination
strategies. In this work, we investigated the effect of 0.5% sodium
hypochlorite on the molecular and morphological properties of single
spores of Bacillus subtilis using single-cell techniques. Laser
tweezers Raman spectroscopy showed that sodium hypochlorite resulted in
Ca 2+-dipicolinic acid release and nucleic acid
denaturation. Atomic force microscopy showed that the surface of treated
spores changed from rough to smooth, protein shells were degraded at 10
min, and the permeability barrier was destroyed at 15 min. The spore
volume decreased gradually over time. Live-cell imaging showed that the
germination and growth rates decreased with increasing treatment time.
These results provide new insight into the response of spores to sodium
hypochlorite.