Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina 27834
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The opportunistic pathogen
Bacteroides fragilis
is a commensal organism in the large intestine, where it utilizes both dietary and host-derived polysaccharides as a source of carbon and energy. In this study, a four-gene operon required for starch utilization was identified. The operon also was found to be oxygen responsive and thus was designated
osu
for
o
xygen-induced
s
tarch
u
tilization. The first three genes in the operon were predicted to encode outer membrane proteins involved in starch binding, and a fourth gene,
osuD
, encoded an amylase involved in starch hydrolysis. Insertional mutation of the
osuA
gene (Ω
osuA
) resulted in the inability to utilize starch or glycogen and an insertional mutation into the
osuD
gene (Ω
osuD
) was severely impaired for growth on starch media. Transcriptional studies indicated that maltose, maltooligosaccharides, and starch were inducers of
osu
expression and that maltose was the strongest inducer. A transcriptional activator of
osuABCD
, OsuR, was identified and found to mediate maltose induction. The Ω
osuA
and Ω
osuD
mutants were able to grow on maltose but not starch, whereas a mutation in
osuR
abolished growth on both substrates, indicating that additional genes under the control of OsuR are needed for maltose utilization. The
osuABCD
operon also was induced by exposure to oxygen and was shown to be part of the oxidative stress response important for aerotolerance of
B. fragilis
. Transcriptional analyses showed that
osuA
was induced 20-fold by oxygen, but OsuR was not required for this activation. Analysis of
osu
mutants suggested that expression of the operon was important for survival during oxygen exposure but not to hydrogen peroxide stress.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology