“…The LacI/GalR family are well‐studied transcriptional repressors that typically mediate inducible regulation of operons involved in carbon metabolism (Weickert and Adhya, 1992). One example of this family, CcpA (Catabolite control protein A), first discovered as a repressor of the Bacillus subtilis amylase operon (Henkin et al ., 1991), has since been shown to be vital to the co‐ordinated expression of a variety of carbon utilization operons, including the processes of carbon catabolite repression and activation in Gram‐positive bacteria (Luesink et al ., 1998; Stulke and Hillen, 2000; Kim et al ., 2002; Viana et al ., 2005) including streptococci (Simpson and Russell, 1998; Rogers and Scannapieco, 2001; Asanuma and Hino, 2006). In previous studies, it was established that the S. pneumoniae CcpA orthologue contributes to the ability of this pathogen to colonize the mouse nasopharynx and infect the lung (Iyer et al ., 2005) and bloodstream (Iyer et al ., 2005).…”