Different Type 1 Fimbrial Genes and Tropisms of Commensal and Potentially Pathogenic Actinomyces spp. with Different Salivary Acidic Proline-Rich Protein and Statherin Ligand Specificities
Open Access
- 1 December 2001
- journal article
- Published by American Society for Microbiology in Infection and Immunity
- Vol. 69 (12) , 7224-7233
- https://doi.org/10.1128/iai.69.12.7224-7233.2001
Abstract
Actinomyces spp. exhibit type 1 fimbria-mediated adhesion to salivary acidic proline-rich proteins (PRPs) and statherin ligands. Actinomyces spp. with different animal and tissue origins belong to three major adhesion types as relates to ligand specificity and type 1 fimbria genes. (i) In preferential acidic-PRP binding, strains of Actinomyces naeslundiigenospecies 1 and 2 from human and monkey mouths displayed at least three ligand specificities characterized by preferential acidic-PRP binding. Slot blot DNA hybridization showed seven highly conserved type 1 fimbria genes (orf1- to -6 andfimP) in genospecies 1 and 2 strains, except thatorf5 and orf3 were divergent in genospecies 1. (ii) In preferential statherin binding, oralActinomyces viscosus strains of rat and hamster origin (and strain 19246 from a human case of actinomycosis) bound statherin preferentially. DNA hybridization and characterization of the type 1 fimbria genes from strain 19246 revealed a homologous gene cluster of four open reading frames (orfA to -C andfimP). Bioinformatics suggested sortase (orfB, orf4, and part oforf5), prepilin peptidase (orfC andorf6), fimbria subunit (fimP), and usher- and autotransporter-like (orfA and orf1to -3) functions. Those gene regions corresponding toorf3 and orf5 were divergent, those corresponding to orf2, orf1, andfimP were moderately conserved, and those corresponding to orf4 and orf6 were highly conserved. Restriction fragment length polymorphism analyses using a fimP probe separated human and monkey and rat and hamster strains into phylogenetically different groups. (iii) In statherin-specific binding, strains of A. naeslundii genospecies 1 from septic and other human infections displayed a low-avidity binding to statherin. Only theorf4 and orf6 gene regions were highly conserved. Finally, rat saliva devoid of statherin bound bacterial strains avidly irrespective of ligand specificity, and specific antisera detected either type 1, type 2, or both types of fimbria on the investigated Actinomyces strains.Keywords
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