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Genomics of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis in Mycobacterium abscessus and M. chelonae

BACKGROUND: The outermost layer of the bacterial surface is of crucial importance because it is in constant interaction with the host. Glycopeptidolipids (GPLs) are major surface glycolipids present on various mycobacterial species. In the fast-grower model organism Mycobacterium smegmatis, GPL bios...

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Autores principales: Ripoll, Fabienne, Deshayes, Caroline, Pasek, Sophie, Laval, Françoise, Beretti, Jean-Luc, Biet, Franck, Risler, Jean-Loup, Daffé, Mamadou, Etienne, Gilles, Gaillard, Jean-Louis, Reyrat, Jean-Marc
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1885439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17490474
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-8-114
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author Ripoll, Fabienne
Deshayes, Caroline
Pasek, Sophie
Laval, Françoise
Beretti, Jean-Luc
Biet, Franck
Risler, Jean-Loup
Daffé, Mamadou
Etienne, Gilles
Gaillard, Jean-Louis
Reyrat, Jean-Marc
author_facet Ripoll, Fabienne
Deshayes, Caroline
Pasek, Sophie
Laval, Françoise
Beretti, Jean-Luc
Biet, Franck
Risler, Jean-Loup
Daffé, Mamadou
Etienne, Gilles
Gaillard, Jean-Louis
Reyrat, Jean-Marc
author_sort Ripoll, Fabienne
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The outermost layer of the bacterial surface is of crucial importance because it is in constant interaction with the host. Glycopeptidolipids (GPLs) are major surface glycolipids present on various mycobacterial species. In the fast-grower model organism Mycobacterium smegmatis, GPL biosynthesis involves approximately 30 genes all mapping to a single region of 65 kb. RESULTS: We have recently sequenced the complete genomes of two fast-growers causing human infections, Mycobacterium abscessus (CIP 104536T) and M. chelonae (CIP 104535T). We show here that these two species contain genes corresponding to all those of the M. smegmatis "GPL locus", with extensive conservation of the predicted protein sequences consistent with the production of GPL molecules indistinguishable by biochemical analysis. However, the GPL locus appears to be split into several parts in M. chelonae and M. abscessus. One large cluster (19 genes) comprises all genes involved in the synthesis of the tripeptide-aminoalcohol moiety, the glycosylation of the lipopeptide and methylation/acetylation modifications. We provide evidence that a duplicated acetyltransferase (atf1 and atf2) in M. abscessus and M. chelonae has evolved through specialization, being able to transfer one acetyl at once in a sequential manner. There is a second smaller and distant (M. chelonae, 900 kb; M. abscessus, 3 Mb) cluster of six genes involved in the synthesis of the fatty acyl moiety and its attachment to the tripeptide-aminoalcohol moiety. The other genes are scattered throughout the genome, including two genes encoding putative regulatory proteins. CONCLUSION: Although these three species produce identical GPL molecules, the organization of GPL genes differ between them, thus constituting species-specific signatures. An hypothesis is that the compact organization of the GPL locus in M. smegmatis represents the ancestral form and that evolution has scattered various pieces throughout the genome in M. abscessus and M. chelonae.
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spelling pubmed-18854392007-06-01 Genomics of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis in Mycobacterium abscessus and M. chelonae Ripoll, Fabienne Deshayes, Caroline Pasek, Sophie Laval, Françoise Beretti, Jean-Luc Biet, Franck Risler, Jean-Loup Daffé, Mamadou Etienne, Gilles Gaillard, Jean-Louis Reyrat, Jean-Marc BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: The outermost layer of the bacterial surface is of crucial importance because it is in constant interaction with the host. Glycopeptidolipids (GPLs) are major surface glycolipids present on various mycobacterial species. In the fast-grower model organism Mycobacterium smegmatis, GPL biosynthesis involves approximately 30 genes all mapping to a single region of 65 kb. RESULTS: We have recently sequenced the complete genomes of two fast-growers causing human infections, Mycobacterium abscessus (CIP 104536T) and M. chelonae (CIP 104535T). We show here that these two species contain genes corresponding to all those of the M. smegmatis "GPL locus", with extensive conservation of the predicted protein sequences consistent with the production of GPL molecules indistinguishable by biochemical analysis. However, the GPL locus appears to be split into several parts in M. chelonae and M. abscessus. One large cluster (19 genes) comprises all genes involved in the synthesis of the tripeptide-aminoalcohol moiety, the glycosylation of the lipopeptide and methylation/acetylation modifications. We provide evidence that a duplicated acetyltransferase (atf1 and atf2) in M. abscessus and M. chelonae has evolved through specialization, being able to transfer one acetyl at once in a sequential manner. There is a second smaller and distant (M. chelonae, 900 kb; M. abscessus, 3 Mb) cluster of six genes involved in the synthesis of the fatty acyl moiety and its attachment to the tripeptide-aminoalcohol moiety. The other genes are scattered throughout the genome, including two genes encoding putative regulatory proteins. CONCLUSION: Although these three species produce identical GPL molecules, the organization of GPL genes differ between them, thus constituting species-specific signatures. An hypothesis is that the compact organization of the GPL locus in M. smegmatis represents the ancestral form and that evolution has scattered various pieces throughout the genome in M. abscessus and M. chelonae. BioMed Central 2007-05-09 /pmc/articles/PMC1885439/ /pubmed/17490474 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-8-114 Text en Copyright © 2007 Ripoll et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ripoll, Fabienne
Deshayes, Caroline
Pasek, Sophie
Laval, Françoise
Beretti, Jean-Luc
Biet, Franck
Risler, Jean-Loup
Daffé, Mamadou
Etienne, Gilles
Gaillard, Jean-Louis
Reyrat, Jean-Marc
Genomics of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis in Mycobacterium abscessus and M. chelonae
title Genomics of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis in Mycobacterium abscessus and M. chelonae
title_full Genomics of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis in Mycobacterium abscessus and M. chelonae
title_fullStr Genomics of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis in Mycobacterium abscessus and M. chelonae
title_full_unstemmed Genomics of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis in Mycobacterium abscessus and M. chelonae
title_short Genomics of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis in Mycobacterium abscessus and M. chelonae
title_sort genomics of glycopeptidolipid biosynthesis in mycobacterium abscessus and m. chelonae
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1885439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17490474
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-8-114
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