Abstract

BackgroundSuccessful commensal bacteria have evolved to maintain colonization in challenging environments. The oral viridans streptococci are pioneer colonizers of dental plaque biofilm. Some of these bacteria have adapted to life in the oral cavity by binding salivary α-amylase, which hydrolyzes dietary starch, thus providing a source of nutrition. Oral streptococcal species bind α-amylase by expressing a variety of amylase-binding proteins (ABPs). Here we determine the genotypic basis of amylase binding where proteins of diverse size and function share a common phenotype.ResultsABPs were detected in culture supernatants of 27 of 59 strains representing 13 oral Streptococcus species screened using the amylase-ligand binding assay. N-terminal sequences from ABPs of diverse size were obtained from 18 strains representing six oral streptococcal species. Genome sequencing and BLAST searches using N-terminal sequences, protein size, and key words identified the gene associated with each ABP. Among the sequenced ABPs, 14 matched amylase-binding protein A (AbpA), 6 matched amylase-binding protein B (AbpB), and 11 unique ABPs were identified as peptidoglycan-binding, glutamine ABC-type transporter, hypothetical, or choline-binding proteins. Alignment and phylogenetic analyses performed to ascertain evolutionary relationships revealed that ABPs cluster into at least six distinct, unrelated families (AbpA, AbpB, and four novel ABPs) with no phylogenetic evidence that one group evolved from another, and no single ancestral gene found within each group. AbpA-like sequences can be divided into five subgroups based on the N-terminal sequences. Comparative genomics focusing on the abpA gene locus provides evidence of horizontal gene transfer.ConclusionThe acquisition of an ABP by oral streptococci provides an interesting example of adaptive evolution.

Highlights

  • Successful commensal bacteria have evolved to maintain colonization in challenging environments

  • Detection of amylase-binding proteins At the time these experiments were initiated in 2013, few ORFs were annotated as ABPs in the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) database

  • amylase-binding protein A (AbpA) is initially associated with the cell wall in mid-log phase, by stationary phase AbpA is secreted into the supernatant providing easy access to the native protein

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Summary

Introduction

Successful commensal bacteria have evolved to maintain colonization in challenging environments. The oral viridans streptococci are pioneer colonizers of dental plaque biofilm. Some of these bacteria have adapted to life in the oral cavity by binding salivary α-amylase, which hydrolyzes dietary starch, providing a source of nutrition. Successful commensals find ways to maintain colonization in challenging environments. Viridans streptococci are the predominant commensal bacteria colonizing the oral cavity and dental plaque biofilm. These bacteria cluster into five groups (mitis, mutans, anginosus, salivarius and bovis) based on 16S rRNA gene sequencing [1, 2].

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