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Journal of Dental Research, Vol 70, 1041-1044, Copyright © 1991 by International & American Associations for Dental Research Online Journals
ARTICLES |
J. S. Van der Hoeven and P. J. Camp
Laboratory of Oral Microbiology, TRIKON, University of Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
Oral streptococci can grow in mucin by utilizing the oligosaccharide chains as a source of carbohydrate. The degradation of the oligosaccharides by these species is accomplished by exoglycosidase activities. In this experiment, it was investigated whether strains from different species could cooperate in the release of sugars from the mucin oligosaccharide. To this end, Streptococcus sanguis Ny 584 and Streptococcus oralis strain Ny 586 were grown continuously in a chemically-defined medium, with pig gastric mucin as the growth-limiting source of carbohydrate. In pure cultures, strain Ny 586 attained approximately three-fold-higher cell densities than did strain Ny 584 in the mucin medium. This was in accordance with the observation that S. oralis Ny 586 exhibited fucosidase activity, as indicated by the presence of fucose in the culture fluid. In contrast, strain Ny 584 has no fucosidase activity against mucin, and therefore cannot attack fucose-ending oligosaccharide chains. Stable mixed cultures of the strains were obtained. It appeared that S. sanguis Ny 584 reached significantly higher cell densities in mixed cultures with S. oralis Ny 586 than in pure culture. Stimulation of the growth of strain Ny 584 was probably due to the generation of non-fucose-ending oligosaccharide chains by fucosidase from strain Ny 586. It is concluded that the synergistic degradation of oligosaccharides in glycoproteins is a potential factor influencing the streptococcal populations in the mouth.
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