| Literature DB >> 23170998 |
Daniela M Remus1, Richard van Kranenburg, Iris I van Swam, Nico Taverne, Roger S Bongers, Michiel Wels, Jerry M Wells, Peter A Bron, Michiel Kleerebezem.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bacterial cell surface-associated polysaccharides are involved in the interactions of bacteria with their environment and play an important role in the communication between pathogenic bacteria and their host organisms. Cell surface polysaccharides of probiotic species are far less well described. Therefore, improved knowledge on these molecules is potentially of great importance to understand the strain-specific and proposed beneficial modes of probiotic action.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23170998 PMCID: PMC3539956 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2859-11-149
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microb Cell Fact ISSN: 1475-2859 Impact factor: 5.328
Figure 1Genetic organization of polysaccharide biosynthesis gene clusters in strains. (A) Genetic organization of the L. plantarum WCFS1 polysaccharide biosynthesis gene clusters 1, 2, and 3 (AL935263; lp_1176 through lp_1234) and comparison with the corresponding regions of L. plantarum strains ST-III (NC_014554; LPST_C0945 through LPST_C0997), JDM-1 (NC_012984; JDM1_1015 through JDM1_1041), and ATCC 14917 (ACGZ02000014; HMPREF0531_11685 through HMPREF0531_11729; ACGZ02000010; HMPREF0531_11316 through HMPREF0531_11319). Dark-grey colored connecting blocks indicate regions of high sequence conservation identified in the genomes of the indicated strains. The white area connecting msa homologues gene of ST-III and JDM-1, indicates that this gene is separated on two contigs in the draft genome sequence available for ATCC14917. (B) Genetic organization of the L. plantarum WCFS1 polysaccharide biosynthesis gene cluster 4. The corresponding regions are conserved in L. plantarum ST-III, ATCC 14917, and JDM1 sharing 99%, 99%, and 97% nucleotide identity with WCFS 1, respectively. Arrows indicate predicted promoters with e-value ≤ 10-5[27].
Figure 2Growth phase dependent gene expression levels of individual gene clusters in WCFS1. Data is represented as average expression of cps genes of cluster 1 (circles), 2 (squares), 3 (upward pointing arrowheads) and 4(downward pointing arrowheads). Error bars represent the range of expression between the highest and lowest expressed gene in the different clusters.
Number of genes, which were significantly changed in response to individual cluster deletions (false discovery rate adjusted p-value ≤ 0.05)
| | NZ3548cm Δ | NZ5333ACm Δ | NZ3549Cm Δ | NZ3534Cm Δ |
| Upregulated | 62 | 84 | 20 | 58 |
| Downregulated | 124 | 158 | 20 | 49 |
| Total | 186 | 242 | 40 | 107 |
Surface glycan composition of WCFS1 and its cluster deletion mutant derivatives
| | WCSF1 | NZ3548Cm Δ | NZ5333ACm Δ | NZ3549Cm Δ | NZ3534Cm Δ | NZ3680Cm Δ |
| Rhamnose | 5.40 | n.d.* | 3.08 | 3.81 | 4.29 | n.d.* |
| Glucosamine | 3.28 | 5.04 | 3.28 | 3.45 | 2.95 | 3.93 |
| Galactose | 17.39 | 0.86 | 8.96 | 15.46 | 14.82 | 1.09 |
| Glucose | 27.98 | 23.81 | 29.16 | 25.28 | 27.03 | 22.22 |
| Galacturonic-acid | 45.66 | 69.79 | 55.52 | 52.00 | 50.92 | 72.23 |
| Molar mass (kg/mol) | 28.93 | 16.5 | 29.36 | 27.79 | 26.82 | 17.64 |
| Polysaccharides isolated (mg/L) | 31.52 | 30.62 | 11.98 | 15.68 | 12.88 | 3.82 |
*n.d. stands for ‘not-detected’.
Figure 3Impact of cluster deletion on host cell signaling measured by a luminescence reporter in TLR2-expressing HEK-293 cells. Data is represented as average +/− the range between 2 independently grown bacterial cultures (15 CFU/HEK-293 cell) of the L. plantarum wild-type like derivative (NZ3400Cm) and cps deletion mutants (NZ3548cm/Δcps1A-I, NZ5333ACm/Δcps2A-J, NZ3549Cm/Δcps3A-J, NZ3534Cm/Δcps4A-J, NZ3550Cm/ Δcps1A-3J and NZ3680Cm/Δcps1A-3J, Δcps4A-J).