Affiliation:
1. Oral and Maxillofacial Pathology, School of Clinical Dentistry, Claremont Crescent, University of Sheffield, S10 2TA, Sheffield, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Tannerella forsythia
is a key contributor to periodontitis, but little is known of its virulence mechanisms. In this study we have investigated the role of sialic acid in biofilm growth of this periodontal pathogen. Our data show that biofilm growth of
T. forsythia
is stimulated by sialic acid, glycolyl sialic acid, and sialyllactose, all three of which are common sugar moieties on a range of important host glycoproteins. We have also established that growth on sialyllactose is dependent on the sialidase of
T. forsythia
since the sialidase inhibitor oseltamivir suppresses growth on sialyllactose. The genome of
T. forsythia
contains a sialic acid utilization locus, which also encodes a putative inner membrane sialic acid permease (NanT), and we have shown this is functional when it is expressed in
Escherichia coli
. This genomic locus also contains a putatively novel TonB-dependent outer membrane sialic acid transport system (TF0033-TF0034). In complementation studies using an
Escherichia coli
strain devoid of its outer membrane sialic acid transporters, the cloning and expression of the
TF0033-TF0034
genes enabled an
E. coli nanR nanC ompR
strain to utilize sialic acid as the sole carbon and energy source. We have thus identified a novel sialic acid uptake system that couples an inner membrane permease with a TonB-dependent outer membrane transporter, and we propose to rename these novel sialic acid uptake genes
nanO
and
nanU
, respectively. Taken together, these data indicate that sialic acid is a key growth factor for this little-characterized oral pathogen and may be key to its physiology
in vivo
.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
58 articles.
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