Affiliation:
1. Departments of Pedodontics1 and
2. Oral Microbiology,2 Osaka University Faculty of Dentistry, Suita-Osaka 565-0871, Japan
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Streptococcus oralis
is a member of the oral streptococcal family and an early-colonizing microorganism in the oral cavity of humans.
S. oralis
is known to produce glucosyltransferase (GTase), which synthesizes glucans from sucrose. The enzyme was purified chromatographically from a culture supernatant of
S. oralis
ATCC 10557. The purified enzyme, GTase-R, had a molecular mass of 173 kDa and a pI of 6.3. This enzyme mainly synthesized water-soluble glucans with no primer dependency. The addition of GTase markedly enhanced the sucrose-dependent resting cell adhesion of
Streptococcus mutans
at a level similar to that found in growing cells of
S. mutans
. The antibody against GTase-R inhibited the glucan-synthesizing activities of
Streptococcus gordonii
and
Streptococcus sanguis
, as well as
S. oralis
. The N-terminal amino acid sequence of GTase-R exhibited no similarities to known GTase sequences of oral streptococci. Using degenerate PCR primers, an 8.1-kb DNA fragment, carrying the gene (
gtfR
) coding for GTase-R and its regulator gene (
rgg
), was cloned and sequenced. Comparison of the deduced amino acid sequence revealed that the
rgg
genes of
S. oralis
and
S. gordonii
exhibited a close similarity. The
gtfR
gene was found to possess a species-specific nucleotide sequence corresponding to the N-terminal 130 amino acid residues. Insertion of
erm
or
aphA
into the
rgg
or
gtfR
gene resulted in decreased GTase activity by the organism and changed the colony morphology of these transformants. These results indicate that
S. oralis
GTase may play an important role in the subsequent colonizing of mutans streptoccoci.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
74 articles.
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