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Structure and Molecular Characterization of Streptococcus pneumoniae Capsular Polysaccharide 10F by Carbohydrate Engineering in Streptococcus oralis
Authors:Jinghua Yang  Nirav Y. Shelat  C. Allen Bush  John O. Cisar
Affiliation:From the Oral Infection and Immunity Branch, NIDCR, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892 and ;the §Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Maryland, Baltimore County, Baltimore, Maryland 21250
Abstract:Although closely related at the molecular level, the capsular polysaccharide (CPS) of serotype 10F Streptococcus pneumoniae and coaggregation receptor polysaccharide (RPS) of Streptococcus oralis C104 have distinct ecological roles. CPS prevents phagocytosis of pathogenic S. pneumoniae, whereas RPS of commensal S. oralis functions as a receptor for lectin-like adhesins on other members of the dental plaque biofilm community. Results from high resolution NMR identified the recognition region of S. oralis RPS (i.e. Galfβ1–6GalNAcβ1–3Galα) in the hexasaccharide repeat of S. pneumoniae CPS10F. The failure of this polysaccharide to support fimbriae-mediated adhesion of Actinomyces naeslundii was explained by the position of Galf, which occurred as a branch in CPS10F rather than within the linear polysaccharide chain, as in RPS. Carbohydrate engineering of S. oralis RPS with wzy from S. pneumoniae attributed formation of the Galf branch in CPS10F to the linkage of adjacent repeating units through sub terminal GalNAc in Galfβ1–6GalNAcβ1–3Galα rather than through terminal Galf, as in RPS. A gene (wcrD) from serotype 10A S. pneumoniae was then used to engineer a linear surface polysaccharide in S. oralis that was identical to RPS except for the presence of a β1–3 linkage between Galf and GalNAcβ1–3Galα. This polysaccharide also failed to support adhesion of A. naeslundii, thereby establishing the essential role of β1–6-linked Galf in recognition of adjacent GalNAcβ1–3Galα in wild-type RPS. These findings, which illustrate a molecular approach for relating bacterial polysaccharide structure to function, provide insight into the possible evolution of S. oralis RPS from S. pneumoniae CPS.
Keywords:Adhesion   Bacteria   Bacterial Genetics   Carbohydrate   Carbohydrate Biosynthesis   Carbohydrate Function   Carbohydrate Structure   Cell Surface Receptor   Cell-Cell Interaction   NMR
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