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Aggregation of oral bacteria by human salivary mucins in comparison to salivary and gastric mucins of animal origin
- Source :
- Antonie van Leeuwenhoek. 58(4)
- Publication Year :
- 1990
-
Abstract
- Seventeen strains of oral bacteria of the genera Actinomyces (5), Bacteroides (3), and Streptococcus (9) were tested for aggregation by the human whole salivary mucin fraction (HWSM) in comparison to three types of animal mucin preparations from submandibular glands of cow (BSM) and sheep (OSM), and from the stomach of pig (PGM). Considerable variation was seen with respect to the rate and titer of aggregation induced by these mucins. The aggregating activity of HWSM varied widely among the different bacterial strains. The Bacteroides group showed hardly any induced aggregation, whereas the final aggregation titers varied for S. sanguis (3 strains) between 12 and 48, for S. oralis (3 strains) between 6 and 48, for the S. mutans group (3 strains) between 6 and 96, and for the five Actinomyces strains even between 6 and 192. For a particular strain, similar differences in titer were seen between the four mucins. For a human salivary mucin (MG-2) it has been described that sialic acid in the sequence NeuAc (α2,3)Gal(β1,3)GalNac- was specifically involved in the interaction with S. sanguis strains, in contrast to S. rattus BHT. Our results, however, indicate that this sugar sequence is not a prerequisite for the aggregation of S. sanguis, as animal mucins, devoid of this structure, were equally well or even better capable of inducing aggregation. On the other hand, desialization of BSM and OSM largely abolished their aggregating capability towards S. rattus BHT. Moreover, it was found that BSM and OSM, which are comparable with respect to their major oligosaccharide structure, show considerable differences in aggregating activity towards the same bacterial strain. The results indicate that the interaction and aggregation of oral bacteria with mucins is not necessarily dictated by specific oligosaccharide structures of the mucins, but may be caused instead by common physico-chemical features of the mucins as well.
- Subjects :
- Saliva
Swine
Molecular Sequence Data
Submandibular Gland
medicine.disease_cause
Microbiology
Bacterial Adhesion
chemistry.chemical_compound
medicine
Animals
Humans
Salivary Proteins and Peptides
Molecular Biology
Mouth
Sheep
biology
Streptococcus
Mucin
Mucins
General Medicine
biology.organism_classification
Sialic acid
Rats
Titer
Kinetics
chemistry
Biochemistry
Carbohydrate Sequence
Gastric Mucosa
Cattle
Bacteroides
Actinomyces
Bacteria
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 00036072
- Volume :
- 58
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Antonie van Leeuwenhoek
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....4fc0ff75b2961e5746c2f9c79d75dce9