Affiliation:
1. Department of Biochemistry, University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-6002
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Members of the antigen I/II family of cell surface proteins are highly conserved, multifunctional adhesins that mediate interactions of oral streptococci with other oral bacteria, with cell matrix proteins (e.g., type I collagen), and with salivary glycoproteins, e.g., gp340. The interaction of gp340 (formerly designated salivary agglutinin) with
Streptococcus mutans
requires an alanine-rich repetitive domain (A region) of antigen I/II that is highly conserved in all members of this family of proteins. In this report, we show that the A regions from the two
Streptococcus gordonii
M5 antigen I/II proteins (SspA and SspB) interact differently with the salivary gp340 glycoprotein and appear to be structurally distinct. Recombinant polypeptides encompassing the A region of SspA or from a highly related
S. mutans
antigen I/II protein (SpaP) competitively inhibited the interaction of gp340 with intact
S. gordonii
and
S. mutans
cells, respectively. In contrast, an A region polypeptide from SspB was inactive, and furthermore, it did not bind to purified gp340 in vitro. Circular dichroism spectra suggested that all three polypeptides were highly α-helical and may form coiled-coil structures. However, the A region of SspB underwent a conformational change and exhibited reduced α-helical structure at pH 8.5, whereas the A region polypeptides from SspA and SpaP were relatively stable under these conditions. Melt curves also indicated that at physiological pH, the A region of SspB lost α-helical structure more rapidly than that of SspA or SpaP when the temperature was increased from 10 to 40°C. Furthermore, the SspB A region polypeptide denatured completely at a temperature that was 7 to 9°C lower than that required for the A region polypeptide of SspA or SpaP. The full-length SspB protein and the three A region peptides migrated in native gel electrophoresis and column chromatography with apparent molecular masses that were approximately 2- to 2.5-fold greater than their predicted molecular masses. However, sedimentation equilibrium ultracentrifugation data showed that the A region peptides sedimented as monomers, suggesting that the peptides may form nonglobular intramolecular coiled-coil structures under the experimental conditions used. Taken together, our results suggest that the A region of SspB is less stable than the corresponding A regions of SspA and SpaP and that this structural difference may explain, at least in part, the functional variation observed in their interactions with salivary gp340.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
20 articles.
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