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1.
Streptococcus sanguis 12 and a naturally occurring mutant, 12 na, were screened for their ultrastructure and adhesive properties in vitro. Negative staining showed that Strep. sanguis 12 carried three types of surface structure. The majority of cells carried long fibrils that in different batches ranged in length from 80 to 207 nm, and shorter fibrils which were 51.0 +/- 15.7 nm long. Both types of fibrils were primarily located at the poles of the cells. Occasionally cells were seen that carried fimbriae, which are structurally distinct from fibrils, and were 3-4 nm wide and less than 1.0 micron long. Strain 12 na carried no detectable surface structures. Ruthenium red staining revealed that both strains carried a loose, amorphous, extracellular polysaccharide layer attached to the cell wall. Streptococcus sanguis 12 na was 83% less adhesive than strain 12 in a saliva-coated hydroxyapatite assay, and 50% less adhesive in a buccal epithelial cell adhesion assay. In contrast, strain 12 na was more sensitive to aggregation by parotid saliva than strain 12, and both strains were equally aggregated by whole saliva. The cell surface hydrophobicity of the two strains was similar. Extraction of surface proteins by sodium lauroyl-sarcosinate followed by sodium dodecylsulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis demonstrated that Strep. sanguis 12 expressed more high mol.wt proteins on its surface than strain 12 na. Using immunogold labelling, the fibrils of strain 12 labelled well with antiserum directed against the long fibrils, but so did the cell surfaces of both Strep. sanguis 12 and 12 na. High molecular weight proteins and cell surface fibrils may be associated with adhesion in this strain.  相似文献   

2.
Fifteen strains of Streptococcus sanguis biotype I and eight strains of Streptococcus sanguis biotype II with peritrichous fibrils, tufts of fibrils or a mixture of fibrils and fimbriae on the cell surface, were tested for their ability to adhere to saliva coated spheroidal hydroxyapatite (S-SHA) in a radiolabelled assay. S. sanguis I strains adhered better than S. sanguis II strains and peritrichously fibrillar strains generally adhered better than tufted strains. There was no correlation between the density of fibrillation and adhesion. The only highly adherent strain of S. sanguis II carried fimbriae in addition to fibrils. No correlation was observed between cell surface hydrophobicity as measured by phase partitioning with hexadecane and adhesion to S-SHA.  相似文献   

3.
M D Willcox  D B Drucker 《Microbios》1989,59(238):19-29
Seven strains of Streptococcus oralis were found to possess surface structures. Four strains possessed long fimbriae which ranged in length from 266-366 nm, while the remaining three strains possessed shorter peritrichously distributed fibrils which ranged in length from 80-197 nm. The fibrillar strains were morphologically similar to strains of Streptococcus sanguis I and II and Streptococcus mitis. No strain of S. oralis produced tufts of fibrils like certain strains of S. sanguis I. Strains of Streptococcus milleri produced peritrichously distributed fimbriae which were morphologically dissimilar to the fimbriae produced by S. oralis strains. S. oralis strains were moderately to highly hydrophobic, but hydrophobicity could not be related to adhesion parameters or type or length or density of surface structures. Furthermore, there appeared to be no correlation between type of surface structures and adhesion parameters. Two of the three fibrillar strains of S. oralis and the peritrichously fibrillar strains of S. sanguis, together with one strain of S. milleri, were able to co-aggregate with actinomycetes.  相似文献   

4.
J E Wyatt  P S Handley 《Microbios》1987,51(207):113-123
Twelve strains of Streptococcus sanguis biotype I and seven strains of Streptococcus sanguis biotype II carrying either peritrichous fibrils or tufts of fibrils, were examined for their susceptibility to aggregation by parotid saliva. Salivary aggregation was evaluated using a spectrophotometric measurement of sedimentation to assess clump size. A clear distinction emerged between structural sub-groups. Irrespective of biotype, strains carrying peritrichous fibrils aggregated strongly whilst tufted strains were little affected. The one strain with peritrichous fimbriae as well as fibrils, was not aggregated by saliva. Pre-treatment of two peritrichously fibrillar strains with parotid saliva reduced their ability to adhere to parotid saliva-coated hydroxyapatite, whereas adhesion of two tufted strains was not inhibited. Inhibition of adhesion may have been due to steric hindrance, but blocking of bacterial adhesins by saliva components could not be discounted.  相似文献   

5.
Cell surfaces of aggregation, adherence, and hydrophilic variants of Streptococcus sanguis were compared with cell surfaces of the parent strain with regard to their protein and antigenic constituents. Cell surface molecules were released by digestion with mutanolysin. Extraction with sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) urea, lithium diiodosalicylate, and boiling water did not solubilize any material which stained with AgNO3 in an SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gel. The parent organism S. sanguis 12, which aggregates in saliva, adheres to saliva-coated hydroxyapatite and is hydrophobic, was found to possess a prominently staining 160,000 molecular weight (MW) protein. This protein was almost completely absent from strain 12na, a hydrophobic nonaggregating variant, and was completely absent from the hydrophilic nonaggregating strain 12L. Trypsinization of strain 12 resulted in the coincident loss of the 160,000-MW protein and the ability to aggregate in saliva. Trypsin treatment reduced but did not eliminate the hydrophobic character of the cells. Boiling destroyed their ability to aggregate, but did not alter their hydrophobicity. Cell wall digests of strain 12 contained a number of proteins which were absent from strains 12na and 12L. Mutanolysin digests of cell walls of the hydrophilic strains contained almost no material that was visible in a silver-stained SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis gel. Culture supernatants contained a number of proteins which were immunologically cross-reactive with cell surface proteins. The hydrophilic organisms released a number of 60,000- to 90,000-MW proteins not seen in culture supernatants from the parent strain.  相似文献   

6.
Adhesive interactions between Candida albicans and oral bacteria are generally thought to play a crucial role in the microbial colonization of denture acrylic, which may lead to denture stomatitis. This study investigated the influence of saliva on the adhesive interactions between C. albicans and Streptococcus sanguis or Actinomyces naeslundii on denture acrylic. First, bacteria were allowed to adhere to the acrylic surface from a flowing suspension, and subsequently yeasts were flowed over the acrylic surface. The organisms were assayed in the presence or absence of human whole saliva. All experiments were carried out in a parallel plate flow chamber and enumeration was done in situ with an image analysis system. In the absence of adhering bacteria, adhesion of C. albicans from buffer was more extensive than from saliva. However, in the presence of adhering bacteria, yeast adhesion from saliva was increased with respect to adhesion of yeasts from buffer, indicating that specific salivary components constitute a bridge between bacteria and yeasts. In all cases, yeast aggregates consisting of 3 to 5 yeast cells were observed adhering to the surface. A surface physico-chemical analysis of the microbial cell surfaces prior to and after bathing the microorganisms in saliva, suggests that this bridging is mediated by acid-base interactions since all strains show a major increase in electron-donating surface free energy parameters upon bathing in saliva, with no change in their zeta potentials. The surface physico-chemical analysis furthermore suggests that S. sanguis and A. naeslundii may use a different mechanism for adhesive interactions with C. albicans in saliva.  相似文献   

7.
Cell surface fibrils could be released from Streptococcus sanguis 12 but not from strains 12na or N by freeze-thawing followed by brief homogenization. Fibrils were isolated from the homogenate by ultracentrifugation or ammonium sulfate precipitation. Electron microscopy demonstrated the presence of dense masses of aggregated fibrils in these preparations. Under nondenaturing conditions, no proteins were seen in polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-PAGE analysis revealed a single band stained with Coomassie blue and periodic acid Schiff stain with a molecular weight in excess of 300,000. The protein has been given the name long-fibril protein (LFP). The molecule was susceptible to digestion with subtilisin, pronase, papain, and trypsin, but was unaffected by chymotrypsin or muramidases. Attempts to dissociate the protein into smaller subunits with urea, guanidine, sodium thiocyanate, and HCl were unsuccessful. Gel filtration on a column of Sephacryl S-400 in the presence of 2% SDS resulted in elution of the protein at the void volume. Antibody raised against the LFP excised from an SDS-PAGE gel reacted with long fibrils on the surface of strain 12 and with isolated fibrils by an immunogold labeling technique. Monoclonal antibody reactive with LFP in SDS-PAGE also reacted with fibrils present on the cell. Antisera raised against the fibrils inhibited adherence to saliva-coated hydroxyapatite.  相似文献   

8.
Strains of Streptococcus salivarius were screened by negative staining for the presence of surface structures. Two structural subgroups were found, carrying either fibrils or fimbriae, projecting from the cell surface. Eight strains carried a very dense peritrichous array of fibrils of two distinct lengths. Long fibrils had an average length of 175 nm, and short fibrils had an average length of 95 nm. Two strains carried only long fibrils, one strain carried only short fibrils, and another strain carried a lateral tuft of very prominent fibrils of two lengths, with a fibrillar fuzz covering the remainder of the cell surface. In all the strains in which they were present, the long fibrils were unaffected by protease or trypsin treatment. In contrast, the short fibrils were completely digested by protease and partially removed by trypsin. Neither long nor short fibrils were affected structurally by mild pepsin digestion or by lipase. The Lancefield extraction procedure removed both long and short fibrils. These twelve fibrillar strains were therefore divisible into four structural subgroups. Extracts of all the fibrillar strains reacted with group K antiserum. The second main structural subgroup consisted of nine strains of S. salivarius, all of which carried morphologically identical, flexible fimbriae arranged peritrichously over the cell surface. The fimbriae were structurally distinct from fibrils and measured 0.5 to 1.0 micron long and 3 to 4 nm wide, with an irregular outline and no obvious substructure. There was no obvious reduction in the number of fimbriae after protease or trypsin treatment. Extracts of the fimbriated strains did not react with the group K antiserum. The two serological and structural subgroups could also be distinguished by colony morphology.  相似文献   

9.
The hydrophobicity of human oral streptococci was measured with the hexadecane assay modified by the incorporation of polyethylene glycol 6000. Large variability in the hydrophobicity between cultures of some strains grown on different occasions was observed whereas other strains were less variable. The variation in hydrophobicity was significantly reduced by growing the cells in continuous culture in a chemostat under glucose-limiting conditions. The Streptococcus mutans strains used all had low hydrophobicity and the mean hydrophobicity of this species was significantly lower ( P < 0.05) than the mean hydrophobicity of Strep. salivarius, Strep. sanguis Type I and Strep. sanguis Type II strains. This finding supports the view that hydrophobicity is a contributing factor in the adhesion of viridans streptococci to oral surfaces.  相似文献   

10.
The hydrophobicity of human oral streptococci was measured with the hexadecane assay modified by the incorporation of polyethylene glycol 6000. Large variability in the hydrophobicity between cultures of some strains grown on different occasions was observed whereas other strains were less variable. The variation in hydrophobicity was significantly reduced by growing the cells in continuous culture in a chemostat under glucose-limiting conditions. The Streptococcus mutans strains used all had low hydrophobicity and the mean hydrophobicity of this species was significantly lower (P less than 0.05) than the mean hydrophobicity of Strep. salivarius, Strep. sanguis Type I and Strep. sanguis Type II strains. This finding supports the view that hydrophobicity is a contributing factor in the adhesion of viridans streptococci to oral surfaces.  相似文献   

11.
It has been shown previously that inactivation of the cshA gene, encoding a major cell surface polypeptide (259 kDa) in the oral bacterium Streptococcus gordonii, generates mutants that are markedly reduced in hydrophobicity, deficient in binding to oral Actinomyces species and to human fibronectin, and unable to colonize the oral cavities of mice. We now show further that surface fibrils 60.7 +/- 14.5 nm long, which are present on wild-type S. gordonii DL1 (Challis) cells, bind CshA-specific antibodies and are absent from the cell surfaces of cshA mutants. To more precisely determine the structural and functional properties of CshA, already inferred from insertional-mutagenesis experiments, we have cloned the entire cshA gene into the replicative plasmid pAM401 and expressed full-length CshA polypeptide on the cell surface of heterologous Enterococcus faecalis JH2-2. Enterococci expressing CshA exhibited a 30-fold increase in cell surface hydrophobicity over E. faecalis JH2-2 carrying the pAM401 vector alone and 2.4-fold-increased adhesion to human fibronectin. CshA expression in E. faecalis also promoted cell-cell aggregation and increased the ability of enterococci to bind Actinomyces naeslundii cells. Electron micrographs of negatively stained E. faecalis cells expressing CshA showed peritrichous surface fibrils 70.3 +/- 9.1 nm long that were absent from control E. faecalis JH2-2(pAM401) cells. The fibrils bound CshA-specific antibodies, as detected by immunoelectron microscopy, and the antibodies inhibited the adhesion of E. faecalis cells to fibronectin. The results demonstrate that the CshA polypeptide is the structural and functional component of S. gordonii adhesive fibrils, and they provide a molecular basis for past correlations of surface fibril production, cell surface hydrophobicity, and adhesion in species of oral "sanguis-like" streptococci.  相似文献   

12.
The effect of the copolymer M239, 144 with and without chlorhexidine on the adherence of oral streptococci to saliva-coated hydroxyapatite was investigated. At 1% w/v M239, 144 reduced the adherence of Streptococcus sanguis NCTC 7863 by 94%. It had a moderate effect on the adherence of other Strep. sanguis strains and a Streptococcus gordonii strain but had no effect on the adherence of Streptococcus oralis or Streptococcus mutans. Chlorhexidine did not influence the anti-adhesive properties of 1% w/v M239, 144.  相似文献   

13.
The adhesion to fibrin-platelet clots in vitro of 21 strains of streptococci isolated from the blood of patients with sub-acute bacterial endocarditis (SABE) was measured. The species, in order of greatest adhesion, were Streptococcus faecalis, Streptococcus mutans, Streptococcus milleri, Streptococcus sanguis , dextran-positive Streptococcus mitior , dextran-negative Streptococcus mitior and Streptococcus salivarius. Individual strains within species, however, cannot be assumed to be representative of their species and may exhibit unusually high or low adhesion. Adhesion depended upon both bacterial concentration and period of contact. There was no simple relationship between ability to adhere and liability to cause endocarditis. Formation of dextran did not increase adhesion. The streptococci were more adhesive than strains of Escherichia coli and Neisseria sicca and less adhesive than strains of Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pyogenes.  相似文献   

14.
The adhesion to fibrin-platelet clots in vitro of 21 strains of streptococci isolated from the blood of patients with sub-acute bacterial endocarditis (SABE) was measured. The species, in order of greatest adhesion, were Streptococcus faecalis, Streptococcus mutans, Streptococcus milleri, Streptococcus sanguis, dextran-positive Streptococcus mitior, dextran-negative Streptococcus mitior and Streptococcus salivarius. Individual strains within species, however, cannot be assumed to be representative of their species and may exhibit unusually high or low adhesion. Adhesion depended upon both bacterial concentration and period of contact. There was no simple relationship between ability to adhere and liability to cause endocarditis. Formation of dextran did not increase adhesion. The streptococci were more adhesive than strains of Escherichia coli and Neisseria sicca and less adhesive than strains of Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus pyogenes.  相似文献   

15.
Streptococcus sanguis FW213 carries peritrichous fimbriae (216±28 nm long) and 6 mutants derived from it lack fimbriae but carry peritrichous fibrils with a mean length of 77–4 + 3–9 nm. Both wild type strain and mutants have a ruthenium red staining layer (≤ 14.5±2.9 nm thick) external to the cell wall at the base of the fibrils and fimbriae. The thickness of this layer is strain dependent. Ruthenium red also stains extracellular masses of material, probably extracellular polysaccharide, but not the fimbriae. S. sanguis strain FW 213 adheres to saliva‐coated hydroxyapatite and buccal epithelial cells and is not aggregated by saliva. The 6 non‐fimbriate mutants of FW213 adhered poorly to hydroxyapatite coated in heated whole saliva (S‐SHA) but 3/6 mutants adhered to the same extent or higher than the wild type to S‐SHA coated in unheated saliva, indicating that strain FW213 may carry a non‐fimbriate adhesin and that whole saliva contains a heat sensitive adhesin. All the mutants had a significantly thinner ruthenium red staining layer (RRL) external to the cell wall than the wild type strain FW213, while the cell surface hydrophobicity showed that the mutants were all less hydrophobic than the wild type FW213.  相似文献   

16.
The subcellular distribution of the cell wall-associated protein antigens of Streptococcus salivarius HB, which are involved in specific adhesive properties of the cells, was studied. Mutants which had lost the adhesive properties and lacked the antigens at the cell surface were compared with the parent strain. Immunoelectron microscopy of cryosections of cells labeled with affinity-purified, specific antisera and colloidal gold-protein A complexes was used to locate the antigens. Antigen C (AgC), a glycoprotein involved in attachment to host surfaces, was mainly located in the fibrillar layer outside the cell wall. A smaller amount of label was also found throughout the cytoplasmic area in the form of small clusters of gold particles, which suggests a macromolecular association. Mutant HB-7, which lacks the wall-associated AgC, accumulated AgC reactivity intracellularly. Intracellular AgC was often found associated with isolated areas of increased electron density, but sometimes seemed to fill the entire interior of the cell. Antigen B (AgB), a protein responsible for interbacterial coaggregation, was also located in the fibrillar layer, although its distribution differed from that of the wall-associated AgC since AgB was found predominantly in the peripheral areas. A very small amount of label was also found in the cytoplasmic area as discrete gold particles. Mutant HB-V5, which lacks wall-associated AgB, was not labeled in the fibrillar coat, but showed the same weak intracellular label as the parent strain. Immunolabeling with serum against AgD, another wall-associated protein but of unknown function, demonstrated its presence in the fibrillar layer of strain HB. Negatively stained preparations of whole cells of wild-type S. salivarius and mutants that had lost wall-associated AgB or AgC revealed that two classes of short fibrils are carried on the cell surface at the same time. AgB and AgC are probably located on separate classes of short, protease-sensitive fibrils 91 and 72 nm in length, respectively. A third class of only very sparsely distributed short fibrils (63 nm) was observed on mutant HB-V51, which lacks both wall-associated AgB and AgC antigens. The identity of these fibrils and whether they are present on the wild type are not clear. The function of long, protease-resistant fibrils of 178 nm, which are also present on the wild-type strain, remains unknown.  相似文献   

17.
Abstract The surface hydrophobicity of 64 bacterial strains isolated from discrete, intra-oral sites of monkeys ( Macaca fascicularis ) was determined by measuring their affinity for hexadecane. Bacteria were also exposed to monkey saliva which either increased or reduced the surface hydrophobicity of the cells. After exposure to saliva those bacteria isolated solely from the mucosal surfaces were significantly more hydrophobic than bacteria ( Streptococcus mutans and Actinomyces spp.) whose major habitat was the dentition. Streptococcus sanguis strains isolated from all intra-oral sites and among the early plaque formers were as hydrophobic as the organisms isolated only from the mucosal surfaces.  相似文献   

18.
Bacteriocinogenic strains of Streptococcus salivarius antagonized Strep. sanguis on blood agar and in Todd-Hewitt broth with, but not without, sucrose. Each organism produced plaque in vitro but, after a mixed inoculum with both organisms, the numbers of Strep. sanguis rapidly fell to <0.01% plaque organisms. A non-bacterio-cinogenic mutant of Strep. salivarius was itself inhibited by Strep. sanguis in the plaque-producing system; derivatives of Strep. sanguis partially resistant to bacteriocin in the plate test nevertheless failed to co-habit plaque with bacteriocinogenic Strep. salivarius. The latter could suppress Strep. sanguis in established monoculture plaque but only if sucrose were continuously supplied. It was concluded that the effect of bacteriocin in plaque formation by these streptococci is linked to other as yet unknown properties which may account for the absence of Strep. salivarius from plaque in vivo .  相似文献   

19.
Nineteen strains of Bacteroides fragilis were examined by negative staining for surface structures. One strain (ATCC 23745) possessed peritrichous fibrils, 16 strains carried peritrichous fimbriae and two strains carried no surface structures. The fimbriae had a diameter of 2.1 +/- 0.25 nm and appeared to be 'curly'. Only a small proportion (4 to 41%, depending on the strain) of cells in a population carried fimbriae or fibrils. Strain A312 Showed phase variation of fimbriae as expression of fimbriae was repressed at 20 degrees C and in early exponential phase at 37 degrees C. The fibrils on strain ATCC 23745 did not exhibit phase variation in response to changes in incubation temperature, growth phase or growth in two different media. Capsules were demonstrated by the Indian ink method on 18 of the 19 strains, varying in size from strain to strain and within the same population. Cultures often contained both capsulate and noncapsulate cells. All strains possessed an electron dense ruthenium red staining layer between 7.9 and 23.9 nm in width attached to the outer membrane. Cell surface hydrophobicity quantified by the hexadecane partition assay gave low values ranging from 6.6 to 52.1%. Only a few strains were able to haemagglutinate and these were only weakly active. There was no correlation between cell surface hydrophobicity, haemagglutinating activity and surface structures.  相似文献   

20.
The plaque-producing properties of Streptococcus sanguis, Streptococcus salivarius, Streptococcus mutans, Streptococcus mitis and Streptococcus faecalis were investigated in an artificial mouth with continuous supply of nutrient. Attention was focused on the role of salivary factors and sucrose in tooth colonization. Plaque formation by single cultures depended on the ability to produce tenacious extracellular polysaccharide or to cohabit the tooth with an organism having this property. Sucrose was the only essential additive to nutrient broth necessary for plaque formation and could not be substituted by sterile natural saliva. Saliva neither facilitated colonization by Strep. mitis nor prevented colonization by Strep. salivarius as may have been supposed from previous reports.  相似文献   

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