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Wax Ester Synthesis is Required for Mycobacterium tuberculosis to Enter In Vitro Dormancy

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is known to produce wax esters (WE) when subjected to stress. However, nothing is known about the enzymes involved in biosynthesis of WE and their role in mycobacterial dormancy. We report that two putative Mtb fatty acyl-CoA reductase genes (fcr) expressed in E. col...

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Autores principales: Sirakova, Tatiana D., Deb, Chirajyoti, Daniel, Jaiyanth, Singh, Harminder D., Maamar, Hedia, Dubey, Vinod S., Kolattukudy, Pappachan E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3522743/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23272127
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051641
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author Sirakova, Tatiana D.
Deb, Chirajyoti
Daniel, Jaiyanth
Singh, Harminder D.
Maamar, Hedia
Dubey, Vinod S.
Kolattukudy, Pappachan E.
author_facet Sirakova, Tatiana D.
Deb, Chirajyoti
Daniel, Jaiyanth
Singh, Harminder D.
Maamar, Hedia
Dubey, Vinod S.
Kolattukudy, Pappachan E.
author_sort Sirakova, Tatiana D.
collection PubMed
description Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is known to produce wax esters (WE) when subjected to stress. However, nothing is known about the enzymes involved in biosynthesis of WE and their role in mycobacterial dormancy. We report that two putative Mtb fatty acyl-CoA reductase genes (fcr) expressed in E. coli display catalytic reduction of fatty acyl-CoA to fatty aldehyde and fatty alcohol. Both enzymes (FCR1/Rv3391) and FCR2/Rv1543) showed a requirement for NADPH as the reductant, a preference for oleoyl-CoA over saturated fatty acyl-CoA and were inhibited by thiol-directed reagents. We generated Mtb gene-knockout mutants for each reductase. Metabolic incorporation of( 14)C-oleate into fatty alcohols and WE was severely diminished in the mutants under dormancy-inducing stress conditions that are thought to be encountered by the pathogen in the host. The fatty acyl-CoA reductase activity in cell lysates of the mutants under nitric oxide stress was significantly reduced when compared with the wild type. Complementation restored the lost activity completely in the Δfcr1 mutant and partially in the Δfcr2 mutant. WE synthesis was inhibited in both Δfcr mutants. The Δfcr mutants exhibited faster growth rates, an increased uptake of (14)C-glycerol suggesting increased permeability of the cell wall, increased metabolic activity levels and impaired phenotypic antibiotic tolerance under dormancy-inducing combined multiple stress conditions. Complementation of the mutants did not restore the development of antibiotic tolerance to wild-type levels. Transcript analysis of Δfcr mutants showed upregulation of genes involved in energy generation and transcription, indicating the inability of the mutants to become dormant. Our results indicate that the fcr1 and fcr2 gene products are involved in WE synthesis under in vitro dormancy-inducing conditions and that WE play a critical role in reaching a dormant state. Drugs targeted against the Mtb reductases may inhibit its ability to go into dormancy and therefore increase susceptibility of Mtb to currently used antibiotics thereby enhancing clearance of the pathogen from patients.
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spelling pubmed-35227432012-12-27 Wax Ester Synthesis is Required for Mycobacterium tuberculosis to Enter In Vitro Dormancy Sirakova, Tatiana D. Deb, Chirajyoti Daniel, Jaiyanth Singh, Harminder D. Maamar, Hedia Dubey, Vinod S. Kolattukudy, Pappachan E. PLoS One Research Article Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) is known to produce wax esters (WE) when subjected to stress. However, nothing is known about the enzymes involved in biosynthesis of WE and their role in mycobacterial dormancy. We report that two putative Mtb fatty acyl-CoA reductase genes (fcr) expressed in E. coli display catalytic reduction of fatty acyl-CoA to fatty aldehyde and fatty alcohol. Both enzymes (FCR1/Rv3391) and FCR2/Rv1543) showed a requirement for NADPH as the reductant, a preference for oleoyl-CoA over saturated fatty acyl-CoA and were inhibited by thiol-directed reagents. We generated Mtb gene-knockout mutants for each reductase. Metabolic incorporation of( 14)C-oleate into fatty alcohols and WE was severely diminished in the mutants under dormancy-inducing stress conditions that are thought to be encountered by the pathogen in the host. The fatty acyl-CoA reductase activity in cell lysates of the mutants under nitric oxide stress was significantly reduced when compared with the wild type. Complementation restored the lost activity completely in the Δfcr1 mutant and partially in the Δfcr2 mutant. WE synthesis was inhibited in both Δfcr mutants. The Δfcr mutants exhibited faster growth rates, an increased uptake of (14)C-glycerol suggesting increased permeability of the cell wall, increased metabolic activity levels and impaired phenotypic antibiotic tolerance under dormancy-inducing combined multiple stress conditions. Complementation of the mutants did not restore the development of antibiotic tolerance to wild-type levels. Transcript analysis of Δfcr mutants showed upregulation of genes involved in energy generation and transcription, indicating the inability of the mutants to become dormant. Our results indicate that the fcr1 and fcr2 gene products are involved in WE synthesis under in vitro dormancy-inducing conditions and that WE play a critical role in reaching a dormant state. Drugs targeted against the Mtb reductases may inhibit its ability to go into dormancy and therefore increase susceptibility of Mtb to currently used antibiotics thereby enhancing clearance of the pathogen from patients. Public Library of Science 2012-12-14 /pmc/articles/PMC3522743/ /pubmed/23272127 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051641 Text en © 2012 Sirakova et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sirakova, Tatiana D.
Deb, Chirajyoti
Daniel, Jaiyanth
Singh, Harminder D.
Maamar, Hedia
Dubey, Vinod S.
Kolattukudy, Pappachan E.
Wax Ester Synthesis is Required for Mycobacterium tuberculosis to Enter In Vitro Dormancy
title Wax Ester Synthesis is Required for Mycobacterium tuberculosis to Enter In Vitro Dormancy
title_full Wax Ester Synthesis is Required for Mycobacterium tuberculosis to Enter In Vitro Dormancy
title_fullStr Wax Ester Synthesis is Required for Mycobacterium tuberculosis to Enter In Vitro Dormancy
title_full_unstemmed Wax Ester Synthesis is Required for Mycobacterium tuberculosis to Enter In Vitro Dormancy
title_short Wax Ester Synthesis is Required for Mycobacterium tuberculosis to Enter In Vitro Dormancy
title_sort wax ester synthesis is required for mycobacterium tuberculosis to enter in vitro dormancy
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3522743/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23272127
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0051641
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