The 95th Annual Meeting of Japanese Society for Bacteriology

Presentation information

On-demand Presentation

[ODP23] 5. Pathogenicity -c. Cell invasion and intracellular parsitism

[ODP-149] Inactivation of Prevotella intermedia OxyR results in reduced invasion into host cells

Mariko Naito, Mikio Shoji (Dept. Microbiol. Oral Infect., Nagasaki Univ. Grad. Sch. Biomedical Sci.)


One of the most abundant bacteria in the subgingival pockets of patients with bleeding following mechanical periodontal therapy is Prevotella intermedia. However, despite its abundance, the molecular mechanisms of its contribution to periodontal disease are not well known. This is mainly due to the lack of genetic tools that would allow examination of the role of predicted virulence factors in the pathogenesis of this bacterium. Here, we report on the first mutant in the P. intermedia OMA14 strain. The mutation is an allelic exchange replacement of the sequences coding for a putative OxyR regulator with ermF sequences coding for the macrolide-lincosamide resistance in anaerobic bacteria. The mutant is severely impaired in its ability to grow with eukaryotic cells, indicating that it is an important target for interventional strategies. Further analyses reveal that its ability to grow with oxidative stress species, in the form of hydrogen peroxide and oxygen, is severely affected. Transcriptome analysis reveals that the major deregulated genes code for the alkylhydroperoxide reductase system. In conclusion, we succeeded in generating the first P. intermedia mutant and show that the oxyR-deficient strain is unable to survive with a variety of host cells as well as with oxidative stress.
(Non-member collaborators: B. Ross Belvin, Qin Gui, Janina P. Lewis)