Streptococcus mutans, the primary etiologic agent of human dental caries, and a variety of oral Streptococcus and Actinomyces spp. synthesize high molecular mass homopolymers of fructose (fructans) with predominantly β2,1- (inulins) or β2,6-linkages (levans). The ability of S. mutans to degrade fructans contributes to the severity of dental caries. The extracellular product of of S. mutans is an exo- β-d-fructofuranosidase that releases fructose from levan and inulin. Located 70 bp downstream of encodes a member of the glycoside hydrolase family 32, but the function of FruB has not been established. Growth assays performed using wild-type UA159 and deficient derivatives, with fructans as the sole carbohydrate source, showed a significant reduction in the growth rate of a mutant on levan, but not on inulin. A purified, recombinant FruB protein degraded levan to release mainly fructooligosaccharides. Driven by the promoter and a secondary promoter located in the 3' region of the sequence, the gene is inducible by fructose and especially by levan, but a stable stem-loop structure in the intergenic region likely modulates transcriptional read-through from . Transcriptomic analysis of UA159 and a mutant grown on 0.2% levan revealed differential expression of genes encoding ABC transporters, transcriptional regulators and genes involved in growth and stress tolerance. The ability of FruB to enhance levan metabolism and the high degree of conservation of FruB across S. mutans isolates imply a significant contribution of FruB to the fitness and virulence of this pathogen in human dental biofilms. Carbohydrate metabolism and acid production are essential for the development of dental caries. As a by-product of sucrose metabolism, formation, and degradation of fructans enhances the severity of caries by S. mutans in animal models. This study highlights a significant breakthrough in identifying FruB in S. mutans as an endolevanase that contributes to efficient utilization of levan, a specific type of fructan produced by certain commensals but not S. mutans. Transcriptomic analysis revealed that FruB-dependent levan metabolism impacted global gene regulation, including a large number of novel genes. Considering the preference for levan by both FruA and FruB, the conservation of in S. mutans might represent a competitive advantage in access to the energy storage produced by dental microbiome. This is the first report demonstrating the presence of an endolevanase in S. mutans, therefore should be of broad interest to the fields of dental caries and complex carbohydrate metabolism.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9241797PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00522-22DOI Listing

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