Abstract

The purpose of this work was to explain how the caries-preventive agent xylitol interferes with the growth of Streptococcus mutans. It was found that the xylitol-sensitive strain of S. mutans 27352 (serotype g) and LG1 (serotype c) took up 14C-xylitol when the labelled pentitol was added to cells growing at the expense of glucose. Uptake of xylitol by growing cells of S. mutans 27352 XR and LG1 XR, two xylitol-insensitive spontaneous mutants, and of S. mutans GS5-2, which was also insensitive to xylitol, was practically inexistent under the same conditions. Alkaline phosphatase treatment followed by enzymatic analysis and thin-layer chromatography revealed that the accumulated product was xylitol phosphate. Intracellular concentrations of 5–7 mM for resting cells and of up to 60 mM for growing cells were calculated. Xylitol was phosphorylated at the expense of phosphoenolpyruvate by toluenized cells of S. mutans LG1, but not by toluenized cells of GS5–2 and S. mutans LG1 XR. The phosphorylation of xylitol was dependent on phosphoenolpyruvate and required the presence of both soluble and membrane cellular fractions in the reaction mixture. This indicated that xylitol was transported and phosphorylated by a phosphoenolpyruvate: sugar phosphotransferase system. The phosphoenolpyruvate-dependent phosphorylation by isolated membranes of S. mutans LG1 in the presence of the soluble fraction was inhibited by fructose but not by glucose, mannose or galactose. Measurement of phosphoenolpyruvate: phosphotransferase activities in isolated membrane revealed that strain 27352 and LG1 had activities for fructose and xylitol; membrane from 27352 XR and LG1 XR had very little activity for fructose and xylitol. It was concluded that xylitol was transported and phosphorylated by a constitutive phosphoenolpyruvate:fructose phosphotransferase system in S. mutans. The data suggested that xylitol toxicity in S. mutans is caused by the intracellular accumulation of xylitol phosphate.

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