Department of Oral Medicine Infection and Immunity, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Molecular Genetics, The Forsyth Institute, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Microbiology (Reading). 2013 Feb;159(Pt 2):275-285. doi: 10.1099/mic.0.062695-0. Epub 2012 Dec 14.
The oral cavity is host to a complex microbial community whose maintenance depends on an array of cell-to-cell interactions and communication networks, with little known regarding the nature of the signals or mechanisms by which they are sensed and transmitted. Determining the signals that control attachment, biofilm development and outgrowth of oral pathogens is fundamental to understanding pathogenic biofilm development. We have previously identified a secreted arginine deiminase (ADI) produced by Streptococcus intermedius that inhibited biofilm development of the commensal pathogen Porphyromonas gingivalis through downregulation of genes encoding the major (fimA) and minor (mfa1) fimbriae, both of which are required for proper biofilm development. Here we report that this inhibitory effect is dependent on enzymic activity. We have successfully cloned, expressed and defined the conditions to ensure that ADI from S. intermedius is enzymically active. Along with the cloning of the wild-type allele, we have created a catalytic mutant (ADIC399S), in which the resulting protein is not able to catalyse the hydrolysis of l-arginine to l-citrulline. P. gingivalis is insensitive to the ADIC399S catalytic mutant, demonstrating that enzymic activity is required for the effects of ADI on biofilm formation. Biofilm formation is absent under l-arginine-deplete conditions, and can be recovered by the addition of the amino acid. Taken together, the results indicate that arginine is an important signal that directs biofilm formation by this anaerobe. Based on our findings, we postulate that ADI functions to reduce arginine levels and, by a yet to be identified mechanism, signals P. gingivalis to alter biofilm development. ADI release from the streptococcal cell and its cross-genera effects are important findings in understanding the nature of inter-bacterial signalling and biofilm-mediated diseases of the oral cavity.
口腔是一个复杂的微生物群落的宿主,其维持依赖于一系列细胞间的相互作用和通信网络,而对于这些信号的性质或它们被感知和传递的机制知之甚少。确定控制口腔病原体附着、生物膜发育和生长的信号对于理解致病生物膜的发展至关重要。我们之前已经鉴定出由中间链球菌产生的一种分泌的精氨酸脱亚氨酶(ADI),通过下调编码主要( fimA)和次要( mfa1)菌毛的基因来抑制共生病原体牙龈卟啉单胞菌的生物膜发育,这两种菌毛都需要适当的生物膜发育。在这里,我们报告说这种抑制作用依赖于酶的活性。我们已经成功地克隆、表达并确定了确保中间链球菌 ADI 具有酶活性的条件。除了克隆野生型等位基因外,我们还创建了一个催化突变体(ADIC399S),其中产生的蛋白质不能催化 l-精氨酸水解为 l-瓜氨酸。牙龈卟啉单胞菌对 ADIC399S 催化突变体不敏感,表明 ADI 对生物膜形成的影响需要酶活性。在 l-精氨酸耗尽的条件下,生物膜形成不存在,并且可以通过添加氨基酸来恢复。总之,这些结果表明精氨酸是指导这种厌氧菌生物膜形成的重要信号。基于我们的发现,我们假设 ADI 的功能是降低精氨酸水平,并通过尚未确定的机制,向牙龈卟啉单胞菌发出信号改变生物膜发育。ADI 从链球菌细胞中的释放及其跨属效应是理解细菌间信号传递和口腔生物膜介导疾病的性质的重要发现。