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1.
Nature ; 596(7873): 597-602, 2021 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34408320

RESUMO

ADP-ribosyltransferases use NAD+ to catalyse substrate ADP-ribosylation1, and thereby regulate cellular pathways or contribute to toxin-mediated pathogenicity of bacteria2-4. Reversible ADP-ribosylation has traditionally been considered a protein-specific modification5, but recent in vitro studies have suggested nucleic acids as targets6-9. Here we present evidence that specific, reversible ADP-ribosylation of DNA on thymidine bases occurs in cellulo through the DarT-DarG toxin-antitoxin system, which is found in a variety of bacteria (including global pathogens such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis, enteropathogenic Escherichia coli and Pseudomonas aeruginosa)10. We report the structure of DarT, which identifies this protein as a diverged member of the PARP family. We provide a set of high-resolution structures of this enzyme in ligand-free and pre- and post-reaction states, which reveals a specialized mechanism of catalysis that includes a key active-site arginine that extends the canonical ADP-ribosyltransferase toolkit. Comparison with PARP-HPF1, a well-established DNA repair protein ADP-ribosylation complex, offers insights into how the DarT class of ADP-ribosyltransferases evolved into specific DNA-modifying enzymes. Together, our structural and mechanistic data provide details of this PARP family member and contribute to a fundamental understanding of the ADP-ribosylation of nucleic acids. We also show that thymine-linked ADP-ribose DNA adducts reversed by DarG antitoxin (functioning as a noncanonical DNA repair factor) are used not only for targeted DNA damage to induce toxicity, but also as a signalling strategy for cellular processes. Using M. tuberculosis as an exemplar, we show that DarT-DarG regulates growth by ADP-ribosylation of DNA at the origin of chromosome replication.


Assuntos
ADP-Ribosilação , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , DNA/química , DNA/metabolismo , Timina/química , Timina/metabolismo , Adenosina Difosfato Ribose/metabolismo , Antitoxinas , Proteínas de Bactérias/química , Toxinas Bacterianas , Sequência de Bases , Biocatálise , DNA/genética , Adutos de DNA/química , Adutos de DNA/metabolismo , Dano ao DNA , Reparo do DNA , Elementos de DNA Transponíveis/genética , DNA Bacteriano/química , DNA Bacteriano/genética , DNA Bacteriano/metabolismo , Modelos Moleculares , Mycobacterium/enzimologia , Mycobacterium/genética , Nitrogênio/química , Nitrogênio/metabolismo , Poli(ADP-Ribose) Polimerases/química , Origem de Replicação/genética , Especificidade por Substrato , Thermus/enzimologia , Timidina/química , Timidina/metabolismo
2.
Microbiology (Reading) ; 170(8)2024 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39150447

RESUMO

Tuberculosis (TB) caused by bacteria of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex remains one of the most important infectious diseases of mankind. Rifampicin is a first line drug used in multi-drug treatment of TB, however, the necessary duration of treatment with these drugs is long and development of resistance is an increasing impediment to treatment programmes. As a result, there is a requirement for research and development of new TB drugs, which can form the basis of new drug combinations, either due to their own anti-mycobacterial activity or by augmenting the activity of existing drugs such as rifampicin. This study describes a TnSeq analysis to identify mutants with enhanced sensitivity to sub-minimum inhibitory concentrations (MIC) of rifampicin. The rifampicin-sensitive mutants were disrupted in genes of a variety of functions and the majority fitted into three thematic groups: firstly, genes that were involved in DNA/RNA metabolism, secondly, genes involved in sensing and regulating mycobacterial cellular systems, and thirdly, genes involved in the synthesis and maintenance of the cell wall. Selection at two concentrations of rifampicin (1/250 and 1/62 MIC) demonstrated a dose response for mutants with statistically significant sensitivity to rifampicin. The dataset reveals mechanisms of how mycobacteria are innately tolerant to and initiate an adaptive response to rifampicin; providing putative targets for the development of adjunctive therapies that potentiate the action of rifampicin.


Assuntos
Testes de Sensibilidade Microbiana , Mycobacterium bovis , Rifampina , Rifampina/farmacologia , Mycobacterium bovis/efeitos dos fármacos , Mycobacterium bovis/genética , Antituberculosos/farmacologia , Mutação , Farmacorresistência Bacteriana/genética
3.
PLoS Pathog ; 14(5): e1006997, 2018 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29746563

RESUMO

Studying ancient DNA allows us to retrace the evolutionary history of human pathogens, such as Mycobacterium leprae, the main causative agent of leprosy. Leprosy is one of the oldest recorded and most stigmatizing diseases in human history. The disease was prevalent in Europe until the 16th century and is still endemic in many countries with over 200,000 new cases reported annually. Previous worldwide studies on modern and European medieval M. leprae genomes revealed that they cluster into several distinct branches of which two were present in medieval Northwestern Europe. In this study, we analyzed 10 new medieval M. leprae genomes including the so far oldest M. leprae genome from one of the earliest known cases of leprosy in the United Kingdom-a skeleton from the Great Chesterford cemetery with a calibrated age of 415-545 C.E. This dataset provides a genetic time transect of M. leprae diversity in Europe over the past 1500 years. We find M. leprae strains from four distinct branches to be present in the Early Medieval Period, and strains from three different branches were detected within a single cemetery from the High Medieval Period. Altogether these findings suggest a higher genetic diversity of M. leprae strains in medieval Europe at various time points than previously assumed. The resulting more complex picture of the past phylogeography of leprosy in Europe impacts current phylogeographical models of M. leprae dissemination. It suggests alternative models for the past spread of leprosy such as a wide spread prevalence of strains from different branches in Eurasia already in Antiquity or maybe even an origin in Western Eurasia. Furthermore, these results highlight how studying ancient M. leprae strains improves understanding the history of leprosy worldwide.


Assuntos
Hanseníase/história , Mycobacterium leprae/genética , DNA Bacteriano/genética , DNA Bacteriano/história , Europa (Continente)/epidemiologia , Evolução Molecular , Variação Genética , Genoma Bacteriano , História Medieval , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno/genética , Humanos , Hanseníase/epidemiologia , Hanseníase/microbiologia , Mycobacterium leprae/classificação , Mycobacterium leprae/patogenicidade , Filogenia , Filogeografia , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único
4.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 46(11): 5692-5703, 2018 06 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29746664

RESUMO

Stress-induced adaptations require multiple levels of regulation in all organisms to repair cellular damage. In the present study we evaluated the genome-wide transcriptional and translational changes following heat stress exposure in the soil-dwelling model actinomycete bacterium, Streptomyces coelicolor. The combined analysis revealed an unprecedented level of translational control of gene expression, deduced through polysome profiling, in addition to transcriptional changes. Our data show little correlation between the transcriptome and 'translatome'; while an obvious downward trend in genome wide transcription was observed, polysome associated transcripts following heat-shock showed an opposite upward trend. A handful of key protein players, including the major molecular chaperones and proteases were highly induced at both the transcriptional and translational level following heat-shock, a phenomenon known as 'potentiation'. Many other transcripts encoding cold-shock proteins, ABC-transporter systems, multiple transcription factors were more highly polysome-associated following heat stress; interestingly, these protein families were not induced at the transcriptional level and therefore were not previously identified as part of the stress response. Thus, stress coping mechanisms at the level of gene expression in this bacterium go well beyond the induction of a relatively small number of molecular chaperones and proteases in order to ensure cellular survival at non-physiological temperatures.


Assuntos
Resposta ao Choque Térmico/genética , Biossíntese de Proteínas , Streptomyces coelicolor/genética , Regulação Bacteriana da Expressão Gênica , Polirribossomos/metabolismo , Streptomyces coelicolor/metabolismo , Transcrição Gênica
5.
BMC Genomics ; 20(1): 431, 2019 May 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31138110

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: BCG is the most widely used vaccine of all time and remains the only licensed vaccine for use against tuberculosis in humans. BCG also protects other species such as cattle against tuberculosis, but due to its incompatibility with current tuberculin testing regimens remains unlicensed. BCG's efficacy relates to its ability to persist in the host for weeks, months or even years after vaccination. It is unclear to what degree this ability to resist the host's immune system is maintained by a dynamic interaction between the vaccine strain and its host as is the case for pathogenic mycobacteria. RESULTS: To investigate this question, we constructed transposon mutant libraries in both BCG Pasteur and BCG Danish strains and inoculated them into bovine lymph nodes. Cattle are well suited to such an assay, as they are naturally susceptible to tuberculosis and are one of the few animal species for which a BCG vaccination program has been proposed. After three weeks, the BCG were recovered and the input and output libraries compared to identify mutants with in vivo fitness defects. Less than 10% of the mutated genes were identified as affecting in vivo fitness, they included genes encoding known mycobacterial virulence functions such as mycobactin synthesis, sugar transport, reductive sulphate assimilation, PDIM synthesis and cholesterol metabolism. Many other attenuating genes had not previously been recognised as having a virulence phenotype. To test these genes, we generated and characterised three knockout mutants that were predicted by transposon mutagenesis to be attenuating in vivo: pyruvate carboxylase, a hypothetical protein (BCG_1063), and a putative cyclopropane-fatty-acyl-phospholipid synthase. The knockout strains survived as well as wild type during in vitro culture and in bovine macrophages, yet demonstrated marked attenuation during passage in bovine lymph nodes confirming that they were indeed involved in persistence of BCG in the host. CONCLUSION: These data show that BCG is far from passive during its interaction with the host, rather it continues to employ its remaining virulence factors, to interact with the host's innate immune system to allow it to persist, a property that is important for its protective efficacy.


Assuntos
Elementos de DNA Transponíveis , Mycobacterium bovis/genética , Animais , Vacina BCG , Bovinos , Colesterol/metabolismo , Biblioteca Gênica , Genes Bacterianos , Aptidão Genética , Mycobacterium bovis/metabolismo , Oxazóis , Açúcares/metabolismo , Sulfatos/metabolismo , Tuberculose Bovina/microbiologia
6.
BMC Genomics ; 16: 372, 2015 May 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25956932

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Mycobacterium tuberculosis continues to kill more people than any other bacterium. Although its archetypal host cell is the macrophage, it also enters, and survives within, dendritic cells (DCs). By modulating the behaviour of the DC, M. tuberculosis is able to manipulate the host's immune response and establish an infection. To identify the M. tuberculosis genes required for survival within DCs we infected primary human DCs with an M. tuberculosis transposon library and identified mutations with a reduced ability to survive. RESULTS: Parallel sequencing of the transposon inserts of the surviving mutants identified a large number of genes as being required for optimal intracellular fitness in DCs. Loci whose mutation attenuated intracellular survival included those involved in synthesising cell wall lipids, not only the well-established virulence factors, pDIM and cord factor, but also sulfolipids and PGL, which have not previously been identified as having a direct virulence role in cells. Other attenuated loci included the secretion systems ESX-1, ESX-2 and ESX-4, alongside many PPE genes, implicating a role for ESX-5. In contrast the canonical ESAT-6 family of ESX substrates did not have intra-DC fitness costs suggesting an alternative ESX-1 associated virulence mechanism. With the aid of a gene-nutrient interaction model, metabolic processes such as cholesterol side chain catabolism, nitrate reductase and cysteine-methionine metabolism were also identified as important for survival in DCs. CONCLUSION: We conclude that many of the virulence factors required for survival in DC are shared with macrophages, but that survival in DCs also requires several additional functions, such as cysteine-methionine metabolism, PGLs, sulfolipids, ESX systems and PPE genes.


Assuntos
Células Dendríticas/microbiologia , Genômica , Metabolismo dos Lipídeos/genética , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genética , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/patogenicidade , Sistemas de Secreção Tipo VII/metabolismo , Parede Celular/metabolismo , Colesterol/metabolismo , Elementos de DNA Transponíveis/genética , Genoma Bacteriano/genética , Humanos , Macrófagos/microbiologia , Mutação , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/citologia , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/metabolismo , Estresse Oxidativo/genética , Fagossomos/microbiologia , Espécies Reativas de Nitrogênio/metabolismo , Virulência
7.
BMC Genomics ; 15: 270, 2014 Apr 08.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24708363

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Leprosy has afflicted humankind throughout history leaving evidence in both early texts and the archaeological record. In Britain, leprosy was widespread throughout the Middle Ages until its gradual and unexplained decline between the 14th and 16th centuries. The nature of this ancient endemic leprosy and its relationship to modern strains is only partly understood. Modern leprosy strains are currently divided into 5 phylogenetic groups, types 0 to 4, each with strong geographical links. Until recently, European strains, both ancient and modern, were thought to be exclusively type 3 strains. However, evidence for type 2 strains, a group normally associated with Central Asia and the Middle East, has recently been found in archaeological samples in Scandinavia and from two skeletons from the medieval leprosy hospital (or leprosarium) of St Mary Magdalen, near Winchester, England. RESULTS: Here we report the genotypic analysis and whole genome sequencing of two further ancient M. leprae genomes extracted from the remains of two individuals, Sk14 and Sk27, that were excavated from 10th-12th century burials at the leprosarium of St Mary Magdalen. DNA was extracted from the surfaces of bones showing osteological signs of leprosy. Known M. leprae polymorphisms were PCR amplified and Sanger sequenced, while draft genomes were generated by enriching for M. leprae DNA, and Illumina sequencing. SNP-typing and phylogenetic analysis of the draft genomes placed both of these ancient strains in the conserved type 2 group, with very few novel SNPs compared to other ancient or modern strains. CONCLUSIONS: The genomes of the two newly sequenced M. leprae strains group firmly with other type 2F strains. Moreover, the M. leprae strain most closely related to one of the strains, Sk14, in the worldwide phylogeny is a contemporaneous ancient St Magdalen skeleton, vividly illustrating the epidemic and clonal nature of leprosy at this site. The prevalence of these type 2 strains indicates that type 2F strains, in contrast to later European and associated North American type 3 isolates, may have been the co-dominant or even the predominant genotype at this location during the 11th century.


Assuntos
Genoma Bacteriano , Hanseníase/microbiologia , Mycobacterium leprae/genética , Arqueologia , Osso e Ossos/microbiologia , Epidemias , Evolução Molecular , Genótipo , História do Século XV , História do Século XVI , História Medieval , Humanos , Hanseníase/epidemiologia , Hanseníase/história , Mycobacterium leprae/classificação , Mycobacterium leprae/isolamento & purificação , Osteologia , Filogenia , Polimorfismo de Nucleotídeo Único , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Esqueleto , Reino Unido/epidemiologia
8.
J Med Microbiol ; 73(2)2024 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38362924

RESUMO

Introduction. We have examined four burials from the St Mary Magdalen mediaeval leprosarium cemetery in Winchester, Hampshire, UK. One (Sk.8) was a male child, two (Sk.45 and Sk.52) were adolescent females and the fourth (Sk.512) was an adult male. The cemetery was in use between the 10th and 12th centuries. All showed skeletal lesions of leprosy. Additionally, one of the two females (Sk.45) had lesions suggestive of multi-cystic tuberculosis and the second (Sk.52) of leprogenic odontodysplasia (LO), a rare malformation of the roots of the permanent maxillary incisors.Gap statement. Relatively little is known of the manifestations of lepromatous leprosy (LL) in younger individuals from the archaeological record.Aims and Methodology. To address this, we have used ancient DNA testing and osteological examination of the individuals, supplemented with X-ray and microcomputed tomography (micro-CT) scan as necessary to assess the disease status.Results and Conclusions. The presence of Mycobacterium leprae DNA was confirmed in both females, and genotyping showed SNP type 3I-1 strains but with a clear genotypic variation. We could not confirm Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex DNA in the female individual SK.45. High levels of M. leprae DNA were found within the pulp cavities of four maxillary teeth from the male child (Sk.8) with LO, consistent with the theory that the replication of M. leprae in alveolar bone may interfere with root formation at key stages of development. We report our biomolecular findings in these individuals and review the evidence this site has contributed to our knowledge of mediaeval leprosy.


Assuntos
Hanseníase Multibacilar , Hanseníase , Adulto , Criança , Humanos , Masculino , Feminino , Adolescente , Microtomografia por Raio-X , Hanseníase/microbiologia , Mycobacterium leprae/genética , DNA Bacteriano/genética , Reino Unido
9.
mSystems ; 9(2): e0132623, 2024 Feb 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38270456

RESUMO

Tuberculosis remains the most pervasive infectious disease and the recent emergence of drug-resistant strains emphasizes the need for more efficient drug treatments. A key feature of pathogenesis, conserved between the human pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis and the model pathogen Mycobacterium marinum, is the metabolic switch to lipid catabolism and altered expression of virulence genes at different stages of infection. This study aims to identify genes involved in sustaining viable intracellular infection. We applied transposon sequencing (Tn-Seq) to M. marinum, an unbiased genome-wide strategy combining saturation insertional mutagenesis and high-throughput sequencing. This approach allowed us to identify the localization and relative abundance of insertions in pools of transposon mutants. Gene essentiality and fitness cost of mutations were quantitatively compared between in vitro growth and different stages of infection in two evolutionary distinct phagocytes, the amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum and the murine BV2 microglial cells. In the M. marinum genome, 57% of TA sites were disrupted and 568 genes (10.2%) were essential, which is comparable to previous Tn-Seq studies on M. tuberculosis and M. bovis. Major pathways involved in the survival of M. marinum during infection of D. discoideum are related to DNA damage repair, lipid and vitamin metabolism, the type VII secretion system (T7SS) ESX-1, and the Mce1 lipid transport system. These pathways, except Mce1 and some glycolytic enzymes, were similarly affected in BV2 cells. These differences suggest subtly distinct nutrient availability or requirement in different host cells despite the known predominant use of lipids in both amoeba and microglial cells.IMPORTANCEThe emergence of biochemically and genetically tractable host model organisms for infection studies holds the promise to accelerate the pace of discoveries related to the evolution of innate immunity and the dissection of conserved mechanisms of cell-autonomous defenses. Here, we have used the genetically and biochemically tractable infection model system Dictyostelium discoideum/Mycobacterium marinum to apply a genome-wide transposon-sequencing experimental strategy to reveal comprehensively which mutations confer a fitness advantage or disadvantage during infection and compare these to a similar experiment performed using the murine microglial BV2 cells as host for M. marinum to identify conservation of virulence pathways between hosts.


Assuntos
Amoeba , Dictyostelium , Mycobacterium marinum , Mycobacterium tuberculosis , Tuberculose , Animais , Camundongos , Humanos , Virulência/genética , Microglia , Mycobacterium marinum/genética , Dictyostelium/genética , Lipídeos
10.
J Infect Dis ; 205(6): 975-83, 2012 Mar 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22315280

RESUMO

Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection claims approximately 2 million lives per year, and improved efficacy of the BCG vaccine remains a World Health Organization priority. Successful vaccination against M. tuberculosis requires the induction and maintenance of T cells. Targeting molecules that promote T-cell survival may therefore provide an alternative strategy to classic adjuvants. We show that the interaction between T-cell-expressed OX40 and OX40L on antigen-presenting cells is critical for effective immunity to BCG. However, because OX40L is lost rapidly from antigen-presenting cells following BCG vaccination, maintenance of OX40-expressing vaccine-activated T cells may not be optimal. Delivering an OX40L:Ig fusion protein simultaneously with BCG provided superior immunity to intravenous and aerosol M. tuberculosis challenge even 6 months after vaccination, an effect that depends on natural killer 1.1(+) cells. Attenuated vaccines may therefore lack sufficient innate stimulation to maintain vaccine-specific T cells, which can be replaced by reagents binding inducible T-cell costimulators.


Assuntos
Vacina BCG/imunologia , Glicoproteínas de Membrana/farmacologia , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/patogenicidade , Tuberculose/prevenção & controle , Fatores de Necrose Tumoral/farmacologia , Vacinação , Animais , Células Apresentadoras de Antígenos/imunologia , Linfócitos T CD8-Positivos/efeitos dos fármacos , Linfócitos T CD8-Positivos/metabolismo , Proliferação de Células , Feminino , Células Matadoras Naturais/efeitos dos fármacos , Células Matadoras Naturais/metabolismo , Ativação Linfocitária , Camundongos , Camundongos Endogâmicos C57BL , Camundongos Knockout , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/efeitos dos fármacos , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/imunologia , Ligante OX40 , Proteínas Recombinantes de Fusão/farmacologia , Linfócitos T/citologia , Linfócitos T/imunologia , Células Th1/efeitos dos fármacos , Células Th1/metabolismo , Tuberculose/imunologia
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