Abstract

As an oral bacterial pathogen, Streptococcus mutans has been known as the aetiologic agent of human dental caries. Among a total of 1960 identified proteins within the genome of this organism, there are about 500 without any known functions. One of these proteins, SMU.440, has very few homologs in the current protein databases and it does not fall into any protein functional families. Phylogenetic studies showed that SMU.440 is related to a particular ecological niche and conserved specifically in some oral pathogens, due to lateral gene transfer. The co-occurrence of a MarR protein within the same operon among these oral pathogens suggests that SMU.440 may be associated with antibiotic resistance. The structure determination of SMU.440 revealed that it shares the same fold and a similar pocket as polyketide cyclases, which indicated that it is very likely to bind some polyketide-like molecules. From the interlinking structural and bioinformatics studies, we have concluded that SMU.440 could be involved in polyketide-like antibiotic resistance, providing a better understanding of this hypothetical protein. Besides, the combination of multiple methods in this study can be used as a general approach for functional studies of a protein with unknown function.

Highlights

  • The Gram-positive oral pathogen Streptococcus mutans is the main leading cause of dental caries [1]

  • Homology Search SMU.440 is a hypothetical protein without any known functions or protein family classification

  • CBEI3892 is from Clostridium beijerinckii, which belongs to a very different class from Bacilli to which Streptococcus belongs

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Summary

Introduction

The Gram-positive oral pathogen Streptococcus mutans is the main leading cause of dental caries [1]. The crystal structure reveals a fold similar to known polyketide cyclases even though the amino acid sequences are quite different. SMU.440 shares a similar binding pocket composed primarily of residues with aromatic and acidic side-chains, which points to a potential binding of a polyketide-like molecule.

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