Cloned gtfA gene of Streptococcus mutans LM7 alters glucan synthesis in Streptococcus sanguis. |
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Authors: | M J Pucci and F L Macrina |
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Abstract: | Streptococcus mutans LM7 (Bratthall serotype e) chromosomal DNA was partially digested with EcoRI and ligated into the positive-selection plasmid vector pOP203(A2+). The ligation mixture was transformed into Escherichia coli, and transformants were selected for tetracycline resistance. Recombinant-bearing clones were screened for their ability to ferment raffinose, using the procedure of Robeson et al. (J. Bacteriol. 153:211-221, 1983). One raffinose-fermenting clone was isolated and found to contain a plasmid with an insert consisting of four EcoRI fragments totalling approximately 10.3 kilobases (kb). This strain was capable of growth on defined medium plus raffinose or sucrose and generated reducing sugars from a sucrose substrate. Southern hybridization analysis of the four EcoRI fragments revealed homology not only to S. mutans LM7 chromosomal DNA but also to S. mutans serotypes b, c, and f. Subcloning of this fragment array into a streptococcal E. coli shuttle vector indicated that a 2.4-kb EcoRI fragment was essential for sucrase activity. E. coli minicell experiments revealed a gene product of 55 kilodaltons. These data along with restriction endonuclease analysis and Southern hybridizations suggested that the cloned S. mutans LM7 gene was closely related to the gtfA gene cloned by Robeson et al. from S. mutans PS13 (Bratthall serotype c). The shuttle plasmid containing the 2.4-kb fragment was transformed into Streptococcus sanguis, which subsequently displayed increased sucrase activity in both intracellular and extracellular fractions. Elevated levels of synthesis of alcohol-insoluble and water-insoluble glucans were observed with crude extracellular fractions of the S. sanguis strain bearing the 2.4-kb fragment. An isolate cured of the shuttle plasmid plus the 2.4-kb fragment displayed wild-type S. sanguis glucan synthesis. In S. sanguis, this gtfA allele may play a role in glucan synthesis by interacting with extant high-molecular-weight glucosyltransferases. |
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