Affiliation:
1. Department of Oral Biology, University of Florida College of Dentistry, Gainesville, Florida 32610
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Oxygen profoundly affects the composition of oral biofilms. Recently, we showed that exposure of
Streptococcus mutans
to oxygen strongly inhibits biofilm formation and alters cell surface biogenesis. To begin to dissect the underlying mechanisms by which oxygen affects known virulence traits of
S. mutans
, transcription profiling was used to show that roughly 5% of the genes of this organism are differentially expressed in response to aeration. Among the most profoundly upregulated genes were autolysis-related genes and those that encode bacteriocins, the ClpB protease chaperone subunit, pyruvate dehydrogenase, the tricarboxylic acid cycle enzymes, NADH oxidase enzymes, and certain carbohydrate transporters and catabolic pathways. Consistent with our observation that the ability of
S. mutans
to form biofilms was severely impaired by oxygen exposure, transcription of the
gtfB
gene, which encodes one of the primary enzymes involved in the production of water-insoluble, adhesive glucan exopolysaccharides, was down-regulated in cells growing aerobically. Further investigation revealed that transcription of
gtfB
, but not
gtfC
, was responsive to oxygen and that aeration causes major changes in the amount and degree of cell association of the Gtf enzymes. Moreover, inactivation of the VicK sensor kinase affected the expression and localization the GtfB and GtfC enzymes. This study provides novel insights into the complex transcriptional and posttranscriptional regulatory networks used by
S. mutans
to modulate virulence gene expression and exopolysaccharide production in response to changes in oxygen availability.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
99 articles.
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