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Keto-Mycolic Acid-Dependent Pellicle Formation Confers Tolerance to Drug-Sensitive Mycobacterium tuberculosis

The chronic nature of tuberculosis (TB), its requirement of long duration of treatment, its ability to evade immune intervention, and its propensity to relapse after drug treatment is discontinued are reminiscent of other chronic, biofilm-associated bacterial diseases. Historically, Mycobacterium tu...

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Autores principales: Sambandan, Dhinakaran, Dao, Dee N., Weinrick, Brian C., Vilchèze, Catherine, Gurcha, Sudagar S., Ojha, Anil, Kremer, Laurent, Besra, Gurdyal S., Hatfull, Graham F., Jacobs, William R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Society of Microbiology 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3663190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23653446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00222-13
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author Sambandan, Dhinakaran
Dao, Dee N.
Weinrick, Brian C.
Vilchèze, Catherine
Gurcha, Sudagar S.
Ojha, Anil
Kremer, Laurent
Besra, Gurdyal S.
Hatfull, Graham F.
Jacobs, William R.
author_facet Sambandan, Dhinakaran
Dao, Dee N.
Weinrick, Brian C.
Vilchèze, Catherine
Gurcha, Sudagar S.
Ojha, Anil
Kremer, Laurent
Besra, Gurdyal S.
Hatfull, Graham F.
Jacobs, William R.
author_sort Sambandan, Dhinakaran
collection PubMed
description The chronic nature of tuberculosis (TB), its requirement of long duration of treatment, its ability to evade immune intervention, and its propensity to relapse after drug treatment is discontinued are reminiscent of other chronic, biofilm-associated bacterial diseases. Historically, Mycobacterium tuberculosis was grown as a pellicle, a biofilm-like structure, at the liquid-air interface in a variety of synthetic media. Notably, the most widely administered human vaccine, BCG, is grown as a pellicle for vaccine production. However, the molecular requirements for this growth remain ill defined. Here, we demonstrate that keto-mycolic acids (keto-MA) are essential for pellicle growth, and mutants lacking in or depleted of this MA species are unable to form a pellicle. We investigated the role of the pellicle biofilm in the reduction of antibiotic sensitivity known as drug tolerance using the pellicle-defective ΔmmaA4 mutant strain. We discovered that the ΔmmaA4 mutant, which is both pellicle defective and highly sensitive to rifampicin (RIF) under planktonic growth, when incorporated within the wild-type pellicle biofilm, was protected from the bactericidal activity of RIF. The observation that growth within the M. tuberculosis pellicle biofilm can confer drug tolerance to a drug-hypersensitive strain suggests that identifying molecular requirements for pellicle growth could lead to development of novel interventions against mycobacterial infections. Our findings also suggest that a class of drugs that can disrupt M. tuberculosis biofilm formation, when used in conjunction with conventional antibiotics, has the potential to overcome drug tolerance.
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spelling pubmed-36631902013-05-28 Keto-Mycolic Acid-Dependent Pellicle Formation Confers Tolerance to Drug-Sensitive Mycobacterium tuberculosis Sambandan, Dhinakaran Dao, Dee N. Weinrick, Brian C. Vilchèze, Catherine Gurcha, Sudagar S. Ojha, Anil Kremer, Laurent Besra, Gurdyal S. Hatfull, Graham F. Jacobs, William R. mBio Research Article The chronic nature of tuberculosis (TB), its requirement of long duration of treatment, its ability to evade immune intervention, and its propensity to relapse after drug treatment is discontinued are reminiscent of other chronic, biofilm-associated bacterial diseases. Historically, Mycobacterium tuberculosis was grown as a pellicle, a biofilm-like structure, at the liquid-air interface in a variety of synthetic media. Notably, the most widely administered human vaccine, BCG, is grown as a pellicle for vaccine production. However, the molecular requirements for this growth remain ill defined. Here, we demonstrate that keto-mycolic acids (keto-MA) are essential for pellicle growth, and mutants lacking in or depleted of this MA species are unable to form a pellicle. We investigated the role of the pellicle biofilm in the reduction of antibiotic sensitivity known as drug tolerance using the pellicle-defective ΔmmaA4 mutant strain. We discovered that the ΔmmaA4 mutant, which is both pellicle defective and highly sensitive to rifampicin (RIF) under planktonic growth, when incorporated within the wild-type pellicle biofilm, was protected from the bactericidal activity of RIF. The observation that growth within the M. tuberculosis pellicle biofilm can confer drug tolerance to a drug-hypersensitive strain suggests that identifying molecular requirements for pellicle growth could lead to development of novel interventions against mycobacterial infections. Our findings also suggest that a class of drugs that can disrupt M. tuberculosis biofilm formation, when used in conjunction with conventional antibiotics, has the potential to overcome drug tolerance. American Society of Microbiology 2013-05-07 /pmc/articles/PMC3663190/ /pubmed/23653446 http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00222-13 Text en Copyright © 2013 Sambandan et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/) , which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sambandan, Dhinakaran
Dao, Dee N.
Weinrick, Brian C.
Vilchèze, Catherine
Gurcha, Sudagar S.
Ojha, Anil
Kremer, Laurent
Besra, Gurdyal S.
Hatfull, Graham F.
Jacobs, William R.
Keto-Mycolic Acid-Dependent Pellicle Formation Confers Tolerance to Drug-Sensitive Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title Keto-Mycolic Acid-Dependent Pellicle Formation Confers Tolerance to Drug-Sensitive Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_full Keto-Mycolic Acid-Dependent Pellicle Formation Confers Tolerance to Drug-Sensitive Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_fullStr Keto-Mycolic Acid-Dependent Pellicle Formation Confers Tolerance to Drug-Sensitive Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_full_unstemmed Keto-Mycolic Acid-Dependent Pellicle Formation Confers Tolerance to Drug-Sensitive Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_short Keto-Mycolic Acid-Dependent Pellicle Formation Confers Tolerance to Drug-Sensitive Mycobacterium tuberculosis
title_sort keto-mycolic acid-dependent pellicle formation confers tolerance to drug-sensitive mycobacterium tuberculosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3663190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23653446
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mBio.00222-13
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