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Human Serum Supplementation Promotes Streptococcus mitis Growth and Induces Specific Transcriptomic Responses

Streptococcus mitis is a normal member of the human oral microbiota and a leading opportunistic pathogen causing infective endocarditis (IE). Despite the complex interactions between S. mitis and the human host, understanding of S. mitis physiology and its mechanisms of adaptation to host-associated...

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Published in:Microbiology spectrum 2023-06, Vol.11 (3), p.e0512922-e0512922
Main Authors: Wei, Yahan, Sturges, Camille I, Palmer, Kelli L
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description Streptococcus mitis is a normal member of the human oral microbiota and a leading opportunistic pathogen causing infective endocarditis (IE). Despite the complex interactions between S. mitis and the human host, understanding of S. mitis physiology and its mechanisms of adaptation to host-associated environments is inadequate, especially compared with other IE bacterial pathogens. This study reports the growth-promoting effects of human serum on S. mitis and other pathogenic streptococci, including S. oralis, S. pneumoniae, and S. agalactiae. Using transcriptomic analyses, we identified that, with the addition of human serum, S. mitis downregulates uptake systems for metal ions and sugars, fatty acid biosynthetic genes, and genes involved in stress response and other processes related with growth and replication. S. mitis upregulates uptake systems for amino acids and short peptides in response to human serum. Zinc availability and environmental signals sensed by the induced short peptide binding proteins were not sufficient to confer the growth-promoting effects. More investigation is required to establish the mechanism for growth promotion. Overall, our study contributes to the fundamental understanding of S. mitis physiology under host-associated conditions. S. mitis is exposed to human serum components during commensalism in the human mouth and bloodstream pathogenesis. However, the physiological effects of serum components on this bacterium remain unclear. Using transcriptomic analyses, S. mitis biological processes that respond to the presence of human serum were revealed, improving the fundamental understanding of S. mitis physiology in human host conditions.
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Despite the complex interactions between S. mitis and the human host, understanding of S. mitis physiology and its mechanisms of adaptation to host-associated environments is inadequate, especially compared with other IE bacterial pathogens. This study reports the growth-promoting effects of human serum on S. mitis and other pathogenic streptococci, including S. oralis, S. pneumoniae, and S. agalactiae. Using transcriptomic analyses, we identified that, with the addition of human serum, S. mitis downregulates uptake systems for metal ions and sugars, fatty acid biosynthetic genes, and genes involved in stress response and other processes related with growth and replication. S. mitis upregulates uptake systems for amino acids and short peptides in response to human serum. Zinc availability and environmental signals sensed by the induced short peptide binding proteins were not sufficient to confer the growth-promoting effects. More investigation is required to establish the mechanism for growth promotion. Overall, our study contributes to the fundamental understanding of S. mitis physiology under host-associated conditions. S. mitis is exposed to human serum components during commensalism in the human mouth and bloodstream pathogenesis. However, the physiological effects of serum components on this bacterium remain unclear. 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source American Society for Microbiology Journals; PubMed Central
subjects Bacteriology
Biological Phenomena
Dietary Supplements
Endocarditis - microbiology
growth promotion
Humans
Research Article
RNA-seq
serum adaptation
Streptococcus - genetics
Streptococcus mitis
Streptococcus mitis - genetics
Streptococcus mitis - metabolism
Streptococcus pneumoniae - genetics
Transcriptome
title Human Serum Supplementation Promotes Streptococcus mitis Growth and Induces Specific Transcriptomic Responses
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