Abstract

Streptococcus mutans and its virulent phages are important members of the human oral microbiota. S. mutans is also the primary causal agent of dental caries. To survive in this ecological niche, S. mutans must encode phage defense mechanisms, which include CRISPR-Cas systems. Here, we describe the CRISPR-Cas type II-A system of S. mutans strain P42S, which was found to display natural adaptation and interference activity in response to phage infection and plasmid transformation. Newly acquired spacers were integrated both at the 5' end of the CRISPR locus and ectopically. In comparisons of the cas genes of P42S to those of other strains of S. mutans, cas1, cas2, and csn2 appear to be highly conserved within the species. However, more diversity was observed with cas9 While the nuclease domains of S. mutans Cas9 (SmCas9) are conserved, the C terminus of the protein, including the protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) recognition domain, is less conserved. In support of these findings, we experimentally demonstrated that the PAMs associated with SmCas9 of strain P42S are NAA and NGAA. These PAMs are different from those previously reported for the CRISPR-Cas system of the model strain S. mutans UA159. This study illustrates the diversity of CRISPR-Cas type II-A systems that can be found within the same bacterial species.IMPORTANCE CRISPR-Cas is one of the mechanisms used by bacteria to defend against viral predation. Increasing our knowledge of the biology and diversity of CRISPR-Cas systems will also improve our understanding of virus-bacterium interactions. As CRISPR-Cas systems acquiring novel immunities under laboratory conditions are rare, Streptococcus mutans strain P42S provides an alternative model to study the adaptation step, which is still the least understood step in CRISPR-Cas biology. Furthermore, the availability of a natural Cas9 protein recognizing an AT-rich PAM opens up new avenues for genome editing purposes.

Highlights

  • Streptococcus mutans and its virulent phages are important members of the human oral microbiota

  • We showed the presence of an active type II-A CRISPR-Cas system in S. mutans P42S following the characterization of bacteriophage-insensitive mutants (BIMs) obtained after a challenge with phage M102AD

  • Functional and structural studies have previously shown that nuclease domains of Cas9 are found in the first part of the protein, which appears to be highly conserved in S. mutans

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Summary

Introduction

Streptococcus mutans and its virulent phages are important members of the human oral microbiota. S. mutans is the primary causal agent of dental caries To survive in this ecological niche, S. mutans must encode phage defense mechanisms, which include CRISPR-Cas systems. While the nuclease domains of S. mutans Cas (SmCas9) are conserved, the C terminus of the protein, including the protospacer adjacent motif (PAM) recognition domain, is less conserved. In support of these findings, we experimentally demonstrated that the PAMs associated with SmCas of strain P42S are NAA and NGAA. This study illustrates the diversity of CRISPR-Cas type II-A systems that can be found within the same bacterial species. Streptococcus mutans is a Gram-positive bacterial species associated with dental caries, which is the most common oral disease. Only the genomic sequences of phage M102 [9], M102AD [10], and ⌽APCM01 [11] are currently available in public databases

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