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Lipidomic Analysis Links Mycobactin Synthase K to Iron Uptake and Virulence in M. tuberculosis

The prolonged survival of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tb) in the host fundamentally depends on scavenging essential nutrients from host sources. M. tb scavenges non-heme iron using mycobactin and carboxymycobactin siderophores, synthesized by mycobactin synthases (Mbt). Although a general mechani...

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Autores principales: Madigan, Cressida A., Martinot, Amanda Jezek, Wei, Jun-Rong, Madduri, Ashoka, Cheng, Tan-Yun, Young, David C., Layre, Emilie, Murry, Jeffrey P., Rubin, Eric J., Moody, D. Branch
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4376628/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25815898
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004792
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author Madigan, Cressida A.
Martinot, Amanda Jezek
Wei, Jun-Rong
Madduri, Ashoka
Cheng, Tan-Yun
Young, David C.
Layre, Emilie
Murry, Jeffrey P.
Rubin, Eric J.
Moody, D. Branch
author_facet Madigan, Cressida A.
Martinot, Amanda Jezek
Wei, Jun-Rong
Madduri, Ashoka
Cheng, Tan-Yun
Young, David C.
Layre, Emilie
Murry, Jeffrey P.
Rubin, Eric J.
Moody, D. Branch
author_sort Madigan, Cressida A.
collection PubMed
description The prolonged survival of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tb) in the host fundamentally depends on scavenging essential nutrients from host sources. M. tb scavenges non-heme iron using mycobactin and carboxymycobactin siderophores, synthesized by mycobactin synthases (Mbt). Although a general mechanism for mycobactin biosynthesis has been proposed, the biological functions of individual mbt genes remain largely untested. Through targeted gene deletion and global lipidomic profiling of intact bacteria, we identify the essential biochemical functions of two mycobactin synthases, MbtK and MbtN, in siderophore biosynthesis and their effects on bacterial growth in vitro and in vivo. The deletion mutant, ΔmbtN, produces only saturated mycobactin and carboxymycobactin, demonstrating an essential function of MbtN as the mycobactin dehydrogenase, which affects antigenicity but not iron uptake or M. tb growth. In contrast, deletion of mbtK ablated all known forms of mycobactin and its deoxy precursors, defining MbtK as the essential acyl transferase. The mbtK mutant showed markedly reduced iron scavenging and growth in vitro. Further, ΔmbtK was attenuated for growth in mice, demonstrating a non-redundant role of hydroxamate siderophores in virulence, even when other M. tb iron scavenging mechanisms are operative. The unbiased lipidomic approach also revealed unexpected consequences of perturbing mycobactin biosynthesis, including extreme depletion of mycobacterial phospholipids. Thus, lipidomic profiling highlights connections among iron acquisition, phospholipid homeostasis, and virulence, and identifies MbtK as a lynchpin at the crossroads of these phenotypes.
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spelling pubmed-43766282015-04-04 Lipidomic Analysis Links Mycobactin Synthase K to Iron Uptake and Virulence in M. tuberculosis Madigan, Cressida A. Martinot, Amanda Jezek Wei, Jun-Rong Madduri, Ashoka Cheng, Tan-Yun Young, David C. Layre, Emilie Murry, Jeffrey P. Rubin, Eric J. Moody, D. Branch PLoS Pathog Research Article The prolonged survival of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tb) in the host fundamentally depends on scavenging essential nutrients from host sources. M. tb scavenges non-heme iron using mycobactin and carboxymycobactin siderophores, synthesized by mycobactin synthases (Mbt). Although a general mechanism for mycobactin biosynthesis has been proposed, the biological functions of individual mbt genes remain largely untested. Through targeted gene deletion and global lipidomic profiling of intact bacteria, we identify the essential biochemical functions of two mycobactin synthases, MbtK and MbtN, in siderophore biosynthesis and their effects on bacterial growth in vitro and in vivo. The deletion mutant, ΔmbtN, produces only saturated mycobactin and carboxymycobactin, demonstrating an essential function of MbtN as the mycobactin dehydrogenase, which affects antigenicity but not iron uptake or M. tb growth. In contrast, deletion of mbtK ablated all known forms of mycobactin and its deoxy precursors, defining MbtK as the essential acyl transferase. The mbtK mutant showed markedly reduced iron scavenging and growth in vitro. Further, ΔmbtK was attenuated for growth in mice, demonstrating a non-redundant role of hydroxamate siderophores in virulence, even when other M. tb iron scavenging mechanisms are operative. The unbiased lipidomic approach also revealed unexpected consequences of perturbing mycobactin biosynthesis, including extreme depletion of mycobacterial phospholipids. Thus, lipidomic profiling highlights connections among iron acquisition, phospholipid homeostasis, and virulence, and identifies MbtK as a lynchpin at the crossroads of these phenotypes. Public Library of Science 2015-03-27 /pmc/articles/PMC4376628/ /pubmed/25815898 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004792 Text en © 2015 Madigan 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
Madigan, Cressida A.
Martinot, Amanda Jezek
Wei, Jun-Rong
Madduri, Ashoka
Cheng, Tan-Yun
Young, David C.
Layre, Emilie
Murry, Jeffrey P.
Rubin, Eric J.
Moody, D. Branch
Lipidomic Analysis Links Mycobactin Synthase K to Iron Uptake and Virulence in M. tuberculosis
title Lipidomic Analysis Links Mycobactin Synthase K to Iron Uptake and Virulence in M. tuberculosis
title_full Lipidomic Analysis Links Mycobactin Synthase K to Iron Uptake and Virulence in M. tuberculosis
title_fullStr Lipidomic Analysis Links Mycobactin Synthase K to Iron Uptake and Virulence in M. tuberculosis
title_full_unstemmed Lipidomic Analysis Links Mycobactin Synthase K to Iron Uptake and Virulence in M. tuberculosis
title_short Lipidomic Analysis Links Mycobactin Synthase K to Iron Uptake and Virulence in M. tuberculosis
title_sort lipidomic analysis links mycobactin synthase k to iron uptake and virulence in m. tuberculosis
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4376628/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25815898
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1004792
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