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1.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 169(10)2023 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37862100

ABSTRACT

Bacteria use population heterogeneity, the presence of more than one phenotypic variant in a clonal population, to endure diverse environmental challenges - a 'bet-hedging' strategy. Phenotypic variants have been described in many bacteria, but the phenomenon is not well-understood in mycobacteria, including the environmental factors that influence heterogeneity. Here, we describe three reproducible morphological variants in M. smegmatis - smooth, rough, and an intermediate morphotype that predominated under typical laboratory conditions. M. abscessus has two recognized morphotypes, smooth and rough. Interestingly, M. tuberculosis exists in only a rough form. The shift from smooth to rough in both M. smegmatis and M. abscessus was observed over time in extended static culture, however the frequency of the rough morphotype was high in pellicle preparations compared to planktonic culture, suggesting a role for an aggregated microenvironment in the shift to the rough form. Differences in growth rate, biofilm formation, cell wall composition, and drug tolerance were noted among M. smegmatis and M. abscessus variants. Deletion of the global regulator lsr2 shifted the M. smegmatis intermediate morphotype to a smooth form but did not fully phenocopy the naturally generated smooth morphotype, indicating Lsr2 is likely downstream of the initiating regulatory cascade that controls these morphotypes. Rough forms typically correlate with higher invasiveness and worse outcomes during infection and our findings indicate the shift to this rough form is promoted by aggregation. Our findings suggest that mycobacterial population heterogeneity, reflected in colony morphotypes, is a reproducible, programmed phenomenon that plays a role in adaptation to unique environments and this heterogeneity may influence infection progression and response to treatment.


Subject(s)
Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous , Mycobacterium abscessus , Mycobacterium , Humans , Mycobacterium abscessus/genetics , Mycobacterium smegmatis/genetics , Mycobacterium Infections, Nontuberculous/microbiology
2.
mBio ; : e0236323, 2023 Oct 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37905920

ABSTRACT

To address the ongoing global tuberculosis crisis, there is a need for shorter, more effective treatments. A major reason why tuberculosis requires prolonged treatment is that, following a short initial phase of rapid killing, the residual Mycobacterium tuberculosis withstands drug killing. Because existing methods lack sensitivity to quantify low-abundance mycobacterial RNA in drug-treated animals, cellular adaptations of drug-exposed bacterial phenotypes in vivo remain poorly understood. Here, we used a novel RNA-seq method called SEARCH-TB to elucidate the Mycobacterium tuberculosis transcriptome in mice treated for up to 28 days with standard doses of isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol. We compared murine results with in vitro SEARCH-TB results during exposure to the same regimen. Treatment suppressed genes associated with growth, transcription, translation, synthesis of rRNA proteins, and immunogenic secretory peptides. Bacteria that survived prolonged treatment appeared to transition from ATP-maximizing respiration toward lower-efficiency pathways and showed modification and recycling of cell wall components, large-scale regulatory reprogramming, and reconfiguration of efflux pump expression. Although the pre-treatment in vivo and in vitro transcriptomes differed profoundly, genes differentially expressed following treatment in vivo and in vitro were similar, with differences likely attributable to immunity and drug pharmacokinetics in mice. These results reveal cellular adaptations of Mycobacterium tuberculosis that withstand prolonged drug exposure in vivo, demonstrating proof of concept that SEARCH-TB is a highly granular pharmacodynamic readout. The surprising finding that differential expression is concordant in vivo and in vitro suggests that insights from transcriptional analyses in vitro may translate to the mouse. IMPORTANCE A major reason that curing tuberculosis requires prolonged treatment is that drug exposure changes bacterial phenotypes. The physiologic adaptations of Mycobacterium tuberculosis that survive drug exposure in vivo have been obscure due to low sensitivity of existing methods in drug-treated animals. Using the novel SEARCH-TB RNA-seq platform, we elucidated Mycobacterium tuberculosis phenotypes in mice treated for with the global standard 4-drug regimen and compared them with the effect of the same regimen in vitro. This first view of the transcriptome of the minority Mycobacterium tuberculosis population that withstands treatment in vivo reveals adaptation of a broad range of cellular processes, including a shift in metabolism and cell wall modification. Surprisingly, the change in gene expression induced by treatment in vivo and in vitro was largely similar. This apparent "portability" from in vitro to the mouse provides important new context for in vitro transcriptional analyses that may support early preclinical drug evaluation.

3.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Mar 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36945388

ABSTRACT

Transcriptome evaluation of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in the lungs of laboratory animals during long-term treatment has been limited by extremely low abundance of bacterial mRNA relative to eukaryotic RNA. Here we report a targeted amplification RNA sequencing method called SEARCH-TB. After confirming that SEARCH-TB recapitulates conventional RNA-seq in vitro, we applied SEARCH-TB to Mycobacterium tuberculosis-infected BALB/c mice treated for up to 28 days with the global standard isoniazid, rifampin, pyrazinamide, and ethambutol regimen. We compared results in mice with 8-day exposure to the same regimen in vitro. After treatment of mice for 28 days, SEARCH-TB suggested broad suppression of genes associated with bacterial growth, transcription, translation, synthesis of rRNA proteins and immunogenic secretory peptides. Adaptation of drug-stressed Mycobacterium tuberculosis appeared to include a metabolic transition from ATP-maximizing respiration towards lower-efficiency pathways, modification and recycling of cell wall components, large-scale regulatory reprogramming, and reconfiguration of efflux pumps expression. Despite markedly different expression at pre-treatment baseline, murine and in vitro samples had broadly similar transcriptional change during treatment. The differences observed likely indicate the importance of immunity and pharmacokinetics in the mouse. By elucidating the long-term effect of tuberculosis treatment on bacterial cellular processes in vivo, SEARCH-TB represents a highly granular pharmacodynamic monitoring tool with potential to enhance evaluation of new regimens and thereby accelerate progress towards a new generation of more effective tuberculosis treatment.

4.
Antimicrob Agents Chemother ; 67(1): e0148322, 2023 01 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36622159

ABSTRACT

The sigmoid Emax model was used to describe the rRNA synthesis ratio (RS ratio) response of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to antimicrobial concentration. RS-Emax measures the maximal ability of a drug to inhibit the RS ratio and can be used to rank-order drugs based on their RS ratio effect. RS-EC90 is the concentration needed to achieve 90% of the RS-Emax, which may guide dose selection to achieve a maximal RS ratio effect in vivo.


Subject(s)
Anti-Infective Agents , Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Tuberculosis , Humans , Antitubercular Agents/pharmacology , Antitubercular Agents/therapeutic use , Benchmarking , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Tuberculosis/drug therapy , Tuberculosis/microbiology , Anti-Infective Agents/pharmacology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics
5.
Nat Commun ; 12(1): 2899, 2021 05 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34006838

ABSTRACT

There is urgent need for new drug regimens that more rapidly cure tuberculosis (TB). Existing TB drugs and regimens vary in treatment-shortening activity, but the molecular basis of these differences is unclear, and no existing assay directly quantifies the ability of a drug or regimen to shorten treatment. Here, we show that drugs historically classified as sterilizing and non-sterilizing have distinct impacts on a fundamental aspect of Mycobacterium tuberculosis physiology: ribosomal RNA (rRNA) synthesis. In culture, in mice, and in human studies, measurement of precursor rRNA reveals that sterilizing drugs and highly effective drug regimens profoundly suppress M. tuberculosis rRNA synthesis, whereas non-sterilizing drugs and weaker regimens do not. The rRNA synthesis ratio provides a readout of drug effect that is orthogonal to traditional measures of bacterial burden. We propose that this metric of drug activity may accelerate the development of shorter TB regimens.


Subject(s)
Antitubercular Agents/administration & dosage , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects , RNA Precursors/metabolism , RNA, Ribosomal/metabolism , Tuberculosis/drug therapy , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Female , Humans , Mice, Inbred BALB C , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/physiology , RNA Precursors/genetics , RNA, Bacterial/genetics , RNA, Bacterial/metabolism , RNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Treatment Outcome , Tuberculosis/diagnosis , Tuberculosis/microbiology
6.
J Bacteriol ; 199(23)2017 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28874407

ABSTRACT

Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a strict aerobe capable of prolonged survival in the absence of oxygen. We investigated the ability of anaerobic M. tuberculosis to counter challenges to internal pH homeostasis in the absence of aerobic respiration, the primary mechanism of proton efflux for aerobic bacilli. Anaerobic M. tuberculosis populations were markedly impaired for survival under a mildly acidic pH relative to standard culture conditions. An acidic environmental pH greatly increased the susceptibilities of anaerobic bacilli to the collapse of the proton motive force by protonophores, to antimicrobial compounds that target entry into the electron transport system, and to small organic acids with uncoupling activity. However, anaerobic bacilli exhibited high tolerance against these challenges at a near-neutral pH. At a slightly alkaline pH, which was near the optimum intracellular pH, the addition of protonophores even improved the long-term survival of bacilli. Although anaerobic M. tuberculosis bacilli under acidic conditions maintained 40% lower ATP levels than those of bacilli under standard culture conditions, ATP loss alone could not explain the drop in viability. Protonophores decreased ATP levels by more than 90% regardless of the extracellular pH but were bactericidal only under acidic conditions, indicating that anaerobic bacilli could survive an extreme ATP loss provided that the external pH was within viable intracellular parameters. Acidic conditions drastically decreased the anaerobic survival of a DosR mutant, while an alkaline environment improved the survival of the DosR mutant. Together, these findings indicate that intracellular acidification is a primary challenge for the survival of anaerobic M. tuberculosis and that the DosR regulon plays a critical role in sustaining internal pH homeostasis.IMPORTANCE During infection, M. tuberculosis bacilli are prevalent in environments largely devoid of oxygen, yet the factors that influence the survival of these severely growth-limited and metabolically limited bacilli remain poorly understood. We determined how anaerobic bacilli respond to fluctuations in environmental pH and observed that these bacilli were highly susceptible to stresses that promoted internal acidic stress, whereas conditions that promoted an alkaline internal pH promoted long-term survival even during severe ATP depletion. The DosR regulon, a major regulator of general hypoxic stress, played an important role in maintaining internal pH homeostasis under anaerobic conditions. Together, these findings indicate that in the absence of aerobic respiration, protection from internal acidification is crucial for long-term M. tuberculosis survival.


Subject(s)
Bacteria, Anaerobic/metabolism , Bacteria, Anaerobic/physiology , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Cell Death/physiology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/physiology , Regulon/physiology , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Bacillus/metabolism , Bacillus/physiology , Cell Respiration/physiology , Electron Transport/physiology , Homeostasis/physiology , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects , Oxygen/metabolism
7.
J Biol Chem ; 287(46): 38434-41, 2012 Nov 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23002234

ABSTRACT

Isoxyl (ISO) and thiacetazone (TAC), two prodrugs once used in the clinical treatment of tuberculosis, have long been thought to abolish Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) growth through the inhibition of mycolic acid biosynthesis, but their respective targets in this pathway have remained elusive. Here we show that treating M. tuberculosis with ISO or TAC results in both cases in the accumulation of 3-hydroxy C(18), C(20), and C(22) fatty acids, suggestive of an inhibition of the dehydratase step of the fatty-acid synthase type II elongation cycle. Consistently, overexpression of the essential hadABC genes encoding the (3R)-hydroxyacyl-acyl carrier protein dehydratases resulted in more than a 16- and 80-fold increase in the resistance of M. tuberculosis to ISO and TAC, respectively. A missense mutation in the hadA gene of spontaneous ISO- and TAC-resistant mutants was sufficient to confer upon M. tuberculosis high level resistance to both drugs. Other mutations found in hypersusceptible or resistant M. tuberculosis and Mycobacterium kansasii isolates mapped to hadC. Mutations affecting the non-essential mycolic acid methyltransferases MmaA4 and MmaA2 were also found in M. tuberculosis spontaneous ISO- and TAC-resistant mutants. That MmaA4, at least, participates in the activation of the two prodrugs as proposed earlier is not supported by our biochemical evidence. Instead and in light of the known interactions of both MmaA4 and MmaA2 with HadAB and HadBC, we propose that mutations affecting these enzymes may impact the binding of ISO and TAC to the dehydratases.


Subject(s)
Mycobacterium bovis/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/metabolism , Mycolic Acids/antagonists & inhibitors , Phenylthiourea/analogs & derivatives , Thioacetazone/pharmacology , Alleles , Antitubercular Agents/pharmacology , Cell Wall/metabolism , Chromatography, Liquid/methods , Fatty Acid Synthases/metabolism , Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry/methods , Genome, Bacterial , Lipids/chemistry , Mass Spectrometry/methods , Models, Chemical , Phenylthiourea/pharmacology , Recombinant Proteins/chemistry , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Time Factors
8.
Nat Chem Biol ; 8(4): 334-41, 2012 Feb 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22344175

ABSTRACT

New chemotherapeutics active against multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis are urgently needed. We report on the identification of an adamantyl urea compound that shows potent bactericidal activity against M. tuberculosis and a unique mode of action, namely the abolition of the translocation of mycolic acids from the cytoplasm, where they are synthesized to the periplasmic side of the plasma membrane and are in turn transferred onto cell wall arabinogalactan or used in the formation of virulence-associated, outer membrane, trehalose-containing glycolipids. Whole-genome sequencing of spontaneous-resistant mutants of M. tuberculosis selected in vitro followed by genetic validation experiments revealed that our prototype inhibitor targets the inner membrane transporter MmpL3. Conditional gene expression of mmpL3 in mycobacteria and analysis of inhibitor-treated cells validate MmpL3 as essential for mycobacterial growth and support the involvement of this transporter in the translocation of trehalose monomycolate across the plasma membrane.


Subject(s)
Adamantane/analogs & derivatives , Anti-Bacterial Agents/chemistry , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacology , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects , Mycolic Acids/metabolism , Phenylurea Compounds/pharmacology , Adamantane/chemistry , Adamantane/pharmacology , Anti-Bacterial Agents/pharmacokinetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biological Transport/drug effects , Cell Membrane/drug effects , Cord Factors , Drug Evaluation, Preclinical/methods , Drug Resistance, Bacterial , Membrane Transport Proteins/genetics , Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Microbial Sensitivity Tests , Mutation , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/metabolism , Phenylurea Compounds/chemistry , Small Molecule Libraries , Trehalose/metabolism
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