Amylase Binding to Oral Streptococci: A Key Interaction for Human Oral Microbial Ecology, Adaptation and Fitness
Amarpreet Sabharwal, Elaine M. Haase, Frank A. Scannapieco

TL;DR
This paper explores how amylase binding to oral streptococci influences bacterial colonization, biofilm formation, and oral health.
Contribution
The paper highlights the evolutionary and functional significance of amylase-binding proteins in oral streptococci.
Findings
Amylase binding helps bacteria adhere to host surfaces and form biofilms.
It enables bacteria to metabolize dietary starch for nutritional gain.
Amylase binding may influence bacterial cell division and stress tolerance.
Abstract
The interaction between human salivary alpha-amylase (HSAmy) and amylase-binding oral streptococci (ABS) helps determine the bacteria that colonize the oral cavity by establishing dental biofilms. Streptococci are important pioneer species of the oral cavity and influence oral health as well as common diseases such as dental caries. Various oral streptococcal species express distinct amylase-binding proteins, among which amylase-binding protein A (AbpA), encoded by the abpA gene in Streptococcus gordonii and several other species, which is the most extensively studied. Amylase binding facilitates microbial adhesion to host surfaces and biofilm formation and enables bacteria to harness the host’s amylase enzymatic activity at their cell surface, enhancing their capacity to metabolize dietary starch for nutritional gain. Additionally, amylase binding may also influence bacterial cell…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOral microbiology and periodontitis research · Enzyme Production and Characterization · Probiotics and Fermented Foods
