Association of a novel high molecular weight, serine‐rich protein (SrpA) with fibril‐mediated adhesion of the oral biofilm bacterium Streptococcus cristatus
- 11 April 2005
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Oral Microbiology and Immunology
- Vol. 20 (3) , 131-140
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1399-302x.2004.00190.x
Abstract
The surface of the oral plaque bacterium Streptococcus cristatus is decorated with a lateral tuft of fibrils. The fibrillar tuft functions in the adhesion of S. cristatus to heterologous bacterial species in the plaque biofilm. The tuft typically consists of a densely packed fringe of shorter fibrils 238 ± 19 nm long with longer, less abundant fibrils 403 ± 66 nm long projecting through the fringe of short fibrils. The two types of fibrils in the tufts of S. cristatus have been refractory to biochemical separation, complicating their characterization. A hexadecane partition assay was used to enrich for subpopulations of S. cristatus CR311 (type strain NCTC 12479) having distinct fibrillar morphotypes. Negative staining in the TEM revealed that cells of a hydrophobic subpopulation of S. cristatus (CR311var1) carried only the long fibrils (395 ± 32 nm). A hydrophilic subpopulation of S. cristatus (CR311var3) consisted of mixed morphotypes having no fibrils or remnant short fibrils (223 ± 49 nm). No long fibrils were observed on any cells in the CR311var3 subpopulation. The CR311var3 morphotype, unlike the wild-type strain and CR311var1, was not able to form corncobs with either Corynebacterium matruchotii or Fusobacterium nucleatum. Variant CR311var3 did not express the novel gene srpA, which encodes a high molecular weight (321,882 Da) serine-rich protein, SrpA. The SrpA protein contains two extensive repeat motifs of 17 and 71 amino acids and a gram-positive cell wall anchor consensus sequence (LPNTG). The unusual properties of SrpA most closely resemble those of Fap1, the fimbrial-associated adhesin protein of Streptococcus parasanguis. The association of long fibrils, high surface hydrophobicity, ability to form corncob formations, and expression of the srpA gene suggest that SrpA is a long fibril protein in S. cristatus.Keywords
This publication has 40 references indexed in Scilit:
- Construction of a Novel Transposon Mutagenesis System Useful in the Isolation of Streptococcus parasanguis Mutants Defective in Fap1 GlycosylationInfection and Immunity, 2002
- Streptococcus salivarius Fimbriae Are Composed of a Glycoprotein Containing a Repeated Motif Assembled into a Filamentous Nondissociable StructureJournal of Bacteriology, 2001
- Streptococcus parasanguis Fimbria-Associated Adhesin Fap1 Is Required for Biofilm FormationInfection and Immunity, 2001
- Identification of dipeptide repeats and a cell wall sorting signal in the fimbriae‐associated adhesin, Fap1, of Streptococcus parasanguisMolecular Microbiology, 1999
- Taxonomic Note: Necessary Correction of Specific Epithets Formed as Substantives (Nouns) “in Apposition”International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 1997
- Polypeptides associated with tufts of cell-surface fibrils in an oral StreptococcusMicrobiology, 1995
- Insertional inactivation of binding determinants of Streptococcus crista CC5b using Tn916Oral Microbiology and Immunology, 1995
- Gene disruption identifies a 290 kDa cell‐surface polypeptide conferring hydrophobicity and coaggregation properties in Streptococcus gordoniiMolecular Microbiology, 1992
- Streptococcus crista sp. nov., a Viridans Streptococcus with Tufted Fibrils, Isolated from the Human Oral Cavity and ThroatInternational Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 1991
- Adherence of bacteria to hydrocarbons: A simple method for measuring cell-surface hydrophobicityFEMS Microbiology Letters, 1980