Artículos de revistas
Enterococcus faecalis uses a phosphotransferase system permease and a host colonization-related ABC transporter for maltodextrin uptake
Fecha
2017-05Registro en:
Sauvageot, Nicolas; Mokhtari, Abdelhamid; Joyet, Philippe; Budin Verneuil, Aurélie; Blancato, Victor Sebastian; et al.; Enterococcus faecalis uses a phosphotransferase system permease and a host colonization-related ABC transporter for maltodextrin uptake; American Society for Microbiology; Journal of Bacteriology; 199; 9; 5-2017; 1-49
0021-9193
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Sauvageot, Nicolas
Mokhtari, Abdelhamid
Joyet, Philippe
Budin Verneuil, Aurélie
Blancato, Victor Sebastian
Repizo, Guillermo Daniel
Henry, Céline
Pikis, Andreas
Thompson, John
Magni, Christian
Hartke, Axel
Deutscher, Josef
Resumen
Maltodextrin is a mixture of maltooligosaccharides, which are produced by the degradation of starch or glycogen. They are mostly composed of α-1,4- and some α-1,6-linked glucose residues. Genes presumed to code for the Enterococcus faecalis maltodextrin transporter were induced during enterococcal infection. We therefore carried out a detailed study of maltodextrin transport in this organism. Depending on their length (3 to 7 glucose residues), E. faecalis takes up maltodextrins either via MalT, a maltose-specific permease of the phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP):carbohydrate phosphotransferase system (PTS), or the ATP binding cassette (ABC) transporter MdxEFG-MsmX. Maltotriose, the smallest maltodextrin, is primarily transported by the PTS permease. A malT mutant therefore exhibits significantly reduced growth on maltose and maltotriose. The residual uptake of the trisaccharide is catalyzed by the ABC transporter, because a malT mdxF double mutant no longer grows on maltotriose. The trisaccharide arrives as maltotriose-6"-P in the cell. MapP, which dephosphorylates maltose-6'-P, also releases Pi from maltotriose-6"-P. Maltotetraose and longer maltodextrins are mainly (or exclusively) taken up via the ABC transporter, because inactivation of the membrane protein MdxF prevents growth on maltotetraose and longer maltodextrins up to at least maltoheptaose. E. faecalis also utilizes panose and isopanose, and we show for the first time, to our knowledge, that in contrast to maltotriose, its two isomers are primarily transported via the ABC transporter. We confirm that maltodextrin utilization via MdxEFG-MsmX affects the colonization capacity of E. faecalis, because inactivation of mdxF significantly reduced enterococcal colonization and/or survival in kidneys and liver of mice after intraperitoneal infection.