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Intervening in Symbiotic Cross-Kingdom Biofilm Interactions: a Binding Mechanism-Based Nonmicrobicidal Approach

Overview
Journal mBio
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2021 May 19
PMID 34006656
Citations 11
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Abstract

Early childhood caries is a severe oral disease that results in aggressive tooth decay. Particularly, a synergistic association between a fungus, , and a cariogenic bacterium, , promotes the development of hard-to-remove and highly acidic biofilms, exacerbating the virulent damage. These interactions are largely mediated via glucosyltransferases (GtfB) binding to mannans on the cell wall of Here, we present an enzymatic approach to target GtfB-mannan interactions in this cross-kingdom consortium using mannan-degrading exo- and endo-enzymes. These exo- and endo-enzymes are highly effective in reducing biofilm biomass without killing microorganisms, as well as alleviating the production of an acidic pH environment conducive to tooth decay. To corroborate these results, we present biophysical evidence using single-molecule atomic force microscopy, biofilm shearing, and enamel surface topography analyses. Data show a drastic decrease in binding forces of GtfB to (∼15-fold reduction) following enzyme treatment. Furthermore, enzymatic activity disrupted biofilm mechanical stability and significantly reduced human tooth enamel demineralization without cytotoxic effects on gingival keratinocytes. Our results represent significant progress toward a novel nonbiocidal therapeutic intervention against pathogenic bacterial-fungal biofilms by targeting the interkingdom receptor-ligand binding interactions. Biofilm formation is a key virulence factor responsible for various infectious diseases. Particularly, interactions between a fungus, , and a bacterium, , have been known to play important roles in the pathogenesis of dental caries. Although some antimicrobials have been applied to treat fungal-involved biofilm-associated diseases, these often lack targeting polymicrobial interactions. Furthermore, these may not be appropriate for preventive measures because these antimicrobials may disrupt ecological microbiota and/or induce the prevalence of drug resistance over time. By specifically targeting the interaction mechanism whereby mannoproteins on the surface mediate the cross-kingdom interaction, we demonstrated that mannoprotein-degrading enzymes can effectively disrupt biofilm interactions without microbiocidal effects or causing cytotoxicity to human cells. This suggests a potential application as a targeted approach for intervening a pathogenic cross-kingdom biofilm associated with a costly and unresolved oral disease.

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