Jenkinson H F, Demuth D R
Department of Oral Biology and Oral Pathology, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.
Mol Microbiol. 1997 Jan;23(2):183-90. doi: 10.1046/j.1365-2958.1997.2021577.x.
The antigen I/II family of cell-surface-anchored polypeptides in oral streptococci are structurally complex multi-functional adhesins, with multiple ligand-binding sites. Discrete regions within these polypeptides bind human salivary glycoproteins, other microbial cells, and calcium. Sequences within the N-terminal region bind preferentially fluid-phase glycoproteins, while the C-terminal half of the polypeptide contains species-specific adhesion-mediating sequences that bind surface-immobilized glycoproteins. These features may assist streptococcal adhesion to oral surface receptors despite the presence of excess fluid-phase receptors. Immunological studies reveal an array of T-cell and B-cell epitopes presented by antigen I/II polypeptides and suggest the occurrence of natural suppression of human antibodies to the adhesion-mediating sequences. The functional and immunological properties of antigen I/II proteins may account to a major extent for the success of oral streptococci colonizing and surviving within the human host.
口腔链球菌中细胞表面锚定多肽的抗原I/II家族是结构复杂的多功能黏附素,具有多个配体结合位点。这些多肽中的离散区域可结合人唾液糖蛋白、其他微生物细胞和钙。N端区域内的序列优先结合液相糖蛋白,而多肽的C端一半包含与表面固定糖蛋白结合的物种特异性黏附介导序列。尽管存在过量的液相受体,但这些特性可能有助于链球菌黏附到口腔表面受体。免疫学研究揭示了抗原I/II多肽呈现的一系列T细胞和B细胞表位,并表明存在对黏附介导序列的人抗体的天然抑制。抗原I/II蛋白的功能和免疫学特性在很大程度上可能是口腔链球菌在人类宿主中定殖和存活成功的原因。