Abstract
The Porphyromonas gingivalis Mfa1 fimbria is composed of the Mfa1 to Mfa5 proteins, encoded by the mfa1 to mfa5 genes, respectively, which are tandemly arranged on chromosomes. A recent study discovered that many P. gingivalis strains possess two mfa5 genes (called herein mfa5-1 and mfa5-2), which are also in tandem. This study examined the transcriptional unit and activity of mfa-cluster genes in strains with one (the ATCC 33277 and TDC60 strains) and two (the HG66 and A7436 strains) mfa5 genes. Complementary DNA was prepared from the total RNA extracted from the bacterial cells in the logarithmic growth phase using a random primer. PCR analysis for the intergenic regions from mfa1 to mfa5 or mfa5-2 showed that mfa1 to mfa5 or mfa5-2 formed a polycistronic gene cluster. Quantitative real-time PCR showed that the mfa1 transcription was 5–10 times higher than tha t of mfa2 in all the strains. However, mfa2 to mfa5 mostly showed a comparable expression. Both mfa5 genes were comparably transcribed in HG66 and A7436 strains. The transcriptional levels were almost consistent with the respective protein expression levels. In silico analysis identified a transcriptional terminator structure in the intergenic region between mfa1 and mfa2 that was probably responsible for the decreased transcription rate of mfa2 and the downstream genes.
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