Affiliation:
1. Groupe de Recherche en Écologie Buccale, Département de Biochimie et de Microbiologie, Faculté des Sciences et de Génie, and Faculté de Médecine Dentaire, Université Laval, Québec City, Quebec G1K 7P4, Canada
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The oral bacterium
Streptococcus salivarius
takes up lactose via a transporter called LacS that shares 95% identity with the LacS from
Streptococcus thermophilus
, a phylogenetically closely related organism.
S. thermophilus
releases galactose into the medium during growth on lactose. Expulsion of galactose is mediated via LacS and stimulated by phosphorylation of the transporter by HPr(His∼P), a phosphocarrier of the phosphoenolpyruvate:sugar phosphotransferase transport system (PTS). Unlike
S. thermophilus
,
S. salivarius
grew on lactose without expelling galactose and took up galactose and lactose concomitantly when it is grown in a medium containing both sugars. Analysis of the C-terminal end of
S. salivarius
LacS revealed a IIA-like domain (IIA
LacS
) almost identical to the IIA domain of
S. thermophilus
LacS. Experiments performed with purified proteins showed that
S. salivarius
IIA
LacS
was reversibly phosphorylated on a histidine residue at position 552 not only by HPr(His∼P) but also by HPr(Ser-P)(His∼P), a doubly phosphorylated form of HPr present in large amounts in rapidly growing
S. salivarius
cells. Two other major
S. salivarius
PTS proteins, IIAB
L
Man
and IIAB
H
Man
, were unable to phosphorylate IIA
LacS
. The effect of LacS phosphorylation on growth was studied with strain G71, an
S. salivarius
enzyme I-negative mutant that cannot synthesize HPr(His∼P) or HPr(Ser-P)(His∼P). These results indicated that (i) the wild-type and mutant strains had identical generation times on lactose, (ii) neither strain expelled galactose during growth on lactose, (iii) both strains metabolized lactose and galactose concomitantly when grown in a medium containing both sugars, and (iv) the growth of the mutant was slightly reduced on galactose.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology