Abstract

BackgroundStreptococcus salivarius is an abundant isolate of the human oral microbiota. Since both pH and glucose availability fluctuate frequently in the oral cavity, the goal of this study was to investigate regulation by CodY, a conserved pleiotropic regulator of Gram positive bacteria, in response to these two signals. The chemostat culture system was employed to precisely control the growth parameters, and the transcriptomes of wild-type S. salivarius 57.I and its CodY-null derivative (ΔcodY) grown at pH 7 and 5.5, with limited and excessive glucose supply were determined.ResultsThe transcriptomic analysis revealed that CodY was most active at pH 7 under conditions of glucose limitation. Based on whether a CodY binding consensus could be located in the 5′ flanking region of the identified target, the transcriptomic analysis also found that CodY shaped the transcriptome via both direct and indirect regulation. Inactivation of codY reduced the glycolytic capacity and the viability of S. salivarius at pH 5.5 or in the presence of H2O2. Studies using the Galleria mellonella larva model showed that CodY was essential for the toxicity generated from S. salivarius infection, suggesting that CodY regulation was critical for immune evasion and systemic infections. Furthermore, the CodY-null mutant strain exhibited a clumping phenotype and reduced attachment in biofilm assays, suggesting that CodY also modulates cell wall metabolism. Finally, the expression of genes belonging to the CovR regulon was affected by codY inactivation, but CodY and CovR regulated these genes in opposite directions.ConclusionsMetabolic adaptation in response to nutrient availability and growth pH is tightly linked to stress responses and virulence expression in S. salivarius. The regulation of metabolism by CodY allows for the maximal utilization of available nutrients and ATP production. The counteractive regulation of the CovR regulon could fine tune the transcriptomes in response to environmental changes.

Highlights

  • Streptococcus salivarius is an abundant isolate of the human oral microbiota

  • Geng et al BMC Genomics (2018) 19:386 that are activated by GTP, the CodY proteins of L. lactis and S. pneumoniae exhibit the substitution of three amino acids in the proposed GTP binding site, which may explain the specificity of the cofactors [13]

  • An overview of CodY-regulated genes and the role of CodY in global regulation CodY regulates the expression of S. salivarius urease operon at both pH 7 and 5.5, with a limited (20 mM) or an excessive (100 mM) amount of glucose [22], suggesting that different levels of CodY activity would be detected in the growth conditions in this study

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Streptococcus salivarius is an abundant isolate of the human oral microbiota Since both pH and glucose availability fluctuate frequently in the oral cavity, the goal of this study was to investigate regulation by CodY, a conserved pleiotropic regulator of Gram positive bacteria, in response to these two signals. CodY is one such conserved regulator that controls the expression of both metabolic and virulence genes in response to nutrient starvation in Gram positive bacteria with low GC content [1, 2]. In Bacillus thuringiensis, CodY upregulates the PapR-PlcR quorum sensing system by optimizing the uptake of PapR, the signaling peptide of the transcriptional regulator PlcR. The surplus PapR activates the DNA binding activity of PlcR, and subsequently upregulates the expression of the PlcR regulon and virulence of B. thuringiensis [17].

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call