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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(41): E8711-E8720, 2017 10 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28973896

ABSTRACT

Mycobacterium tuberculosis' success as a pathogen comes from its ability to evade degradation by macrophages. Normally macrophages clear microorganisms that activate pathogen-recognition receptors (PRRs) through a lysosomal-trafficking pathway called "LC3-associated phagocytosis" (LAP). Although Mtuberculosis activates numerous PRRs, for reasons that are poorly understood LAP does not substantially contribute to Mtuberculosis control. LAP depends upon reactive oxygen species (ROS) generated by NADPH oxidase, but Mtuberculosis fails to generate a robust oxidative response. Here, we show that CpsA, a LytR-CpsA-Psr (LCP) domain-containing protein, is required for Mtuberculosis to evade killing by NADPH oxidase and LAP. Unlike phagosomes containing wild-type bacilli, phagosomes containing the ΔcpsA mutant recruited NADPH oxidase, produced ROS, associated with LC3, and matured into antibacterial lysosomes. Moreover, CpsA was sufficient to impair NADPH oxidase recruitment to fungal particles that are normally cleared by LAP. Intracellular survival of the ΔcpsA mutant was largely restored in macrophages missing LAP components (Nox2, Rubicon, Beclin, Atg5, Atg7, or Atg16L1) but not in macrophages defective in a related, canonical autophagy pathway (Atg14, Ulk1, or cGAS). The ΔcpsA mutant was highly impaired in vivo, and its growth was partially restored in mice deficient in NADPH oxidase, Atg5, or Atg7, demonstrating that CpsA makes a significant contribution to the resistance of Mtuberculosis to NADPH oxidase and LC3 trafficking in vivo. Overall, our findings reveal an essential role of CpsA in innate immune evasion and suggest that LCP proteins have functions beyond their previously known role in cell-wall metabolism.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Macrophages/immunology , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/physiology , NADPH Oxidase 2/physiology , Phagocytosis/physiology , Tuberculosis/prevention & control , Animals , Autophagy , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Female , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Macrophages/microbiology , Male , Mice , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Mice, Knockout , Mice, SCID , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/pathogenicity , Nitric Oxide Synthase Type II/physiology , Phagosomes , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Tuberculosis/immunology , Tuberculosis/microbiology
2.
J Biol Chem ; 292(39): 16093-16108, 2017 09 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28821621

ABSTRACT

Protein kinase G (PknG), a thioredoxin-fold-containing eukaryotic-like serine/threonine protein kinase, is a virulence factor in Mycobacterium tuberculosis, required for inhibition of phagolysosomal fusion. Here, we unraveled novel functional facets of PknG during latency-like conditions. We found that PknG mediates persistence under stressful conditions like hypoxia and abets drug tolerance. PknG mutant displayed minimal growth in nutrient-limited conditions, suggesting its role in modulating cellular metabolism. Intracellular metabolic profiling revealed that PknG is necessary for efficient metabolic adaptation during hypoxia. Notably, the PknG mutant exhibited a reductive shift in mycothiol redox potential and compromised stress response. Exposure to antibiotics and hypoxic environment resulted in higher oxidative shift in mycothiol redox potential of PknG mutant compared with the wild type. Persistence during latency-like conditions required kinase activity and thioredoxin motifs of PknG and is mediated through phosphorylation of a central metabolic regulator GarA. Finally, using a guinea pig model of infection, we assessed the in vivo role of PknG in manifestation of disease pathology and established a role for PknG in the formation of stable granuloma, hallmark structures of latent tuberculosis. Taken together, PknG-mediated GarA phosphorylation is important for maintenance of both mycobacterial physiology and redox poise, an axis that is dispensable for survival under normoxic conditions but is critical for non-replicating persistence of mycobacteria. In conclusion, we propose that PknG probably acts as a modulator of latency-associated signals.


Subject(s)
Antigens, Bacterial/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Granuloma/etiology , Latent Tuberculosis/microbiology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/metabolism , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Amino Acid Motifs , Amino Acid Substitution , Animals , Antibiotics, Antitubercular/pharmacology , Antigens, Bacterial/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Female , Gene Deletion , Granuloma/metabolism , Granuloma/microbiology , Guinea Pigs , Isoniazid/pharmacology , Kinetics , Latent Tuberculosis/metabolism , Latent Tuberculosis/physiopathology , Metabolomics/methods , Microbial Viability/drug effects , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/growth & development , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/physiology , Phosphorylation/drug effects , Point Mutation , Protein Processing, Post-Translational/drug effects , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/chemistry , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/genetics , Stress, Physiological
3.
Nucleic Acids Res ; 43(8): 3922-37, 2015 Apr 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25824946

ABSTRACT

To effectively modulate the gene expression within an infected mammalian cell, the pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis would need to bring about epigenetic modifications at appropriate genomic loci. Working on this hypothesis, we show in this study that the mycobacterial protein Rv2966c is a 5-methylcytosine-specific DNA methyltransferase that is secreted out from the mycobacterium and gets localized to the nucleus in addition to the cytoplasm inside the host cell. Importantly, Rv2966c binds to specific DNA sequences, methylates cytosines predominantly in a non-CpG context and its methylation activity is positively influenced by phosphorylation. Interestingly, like the mammalian DNA methyltransferase, DNMT3L, Rv2966c can also interact with histone proteins. Ours is the first study that identifies a protein from a pathogenic bacteria with potential to influence host DNA methylation in a non-canonical manner providing the pathogen with a novel mechanism to alter the host epigenetic machinery. This contention is supported by repression of host genes upon M. tuberculosis infection correlated with Rv2966c binding and non-CpG methylation.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Chromatin/metabolism , DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases/metabolism , Histones/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Cell Line , Cell Nucleus/enzymology , CpG Islands , DNA/metabolism , DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases/chemistry , DNA Methylation , Humans , Phosphorylation , Protein Binding , Protein Processing, Post-Translational , Protein Sorting Signals
4.
J Biol Chem ; 290(15): 9626-45, 2015 Apr 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25713147

ABSTRACT

The essential mycobacterial protein kinases PknA and PknB play crucial roles in modulating cell shape and division. However, the precise in vivo functional aspects of PknA have not been investigated. This study aims to dissect the role of PknA in mediating cell survival in vitro as well as in vivo. We observed aberrant cell shape and severe growth defects when PknA was depleted. Using the mouse infection model, we observe that PknA is essential for survival of the pathogen in the host. Complementation studies affirm the importance of the kinase, juxtamembrane, and transmembrane domains of PknA. Surprisingly, the extracytoplasmic domain is dispensable for cell growth and survival in vitro. We find that phosphorylation of the activation loop at Thr(172) of PknA is critical for bacterial growth. PknB has been previously suggested to be the receptor kinase, which activates multiple kinases, including PknA, by trans-phosphorylating their activation loop residues. Using phospho-specific PknA antibodies and conditional pknB mutant, we find that PknA autophosphorylates its activation loop independent of PknB. Fluorescently tagged PknA and PknB show distinctive distribution patterns within the cell, suggesting that although both kinases are known to modulate cell shape and division, their modes of action are likely to be different. This is supported by our findings that expression of kinase-dead PknA versus kinase-dead PknB in mycobacterial cells leads to different cellular phenotypes. Data indicate that although PknA and PknB are expressed as part of the same operon, they appear to be regulating cellular processes through divergent signaling pathways.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Microbial Viability , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Biocatalysis , Blotting, Western , Enzyme Activation , Female , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Male , Mice, Inbred C57BL , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Mutation , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/physiology , Phosphorylation , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/genetics , Tuberculosis/microbiology
5.
J Biol Chem ; 289(20): 13858-75, 2014 May 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24706757

ABSTRACT

The Mycobacterium tuberculosis protein kinase B (PknB) comprises an intracellular kinase domain, connected through a transmembrane domain to an extracellular region that contains four PASTA domains. The present study describes the comprehensive analysis of different domains of PknB in the context of viability in avirulent and virulent mycobacteria. We find stringent regulation of PknB expression necessary for cell survival, with depletion or overexpression of PknB leading to cell death. Although PknB-mediated kinase activity is essential for cell survival, active kinase lacking the transmembrane or extracellular domain fails to complement conditional mutants not expressing PknB. By creating chimeric kinases, we find that the intracellular kinase domain has unique functions in the virulent strain, which cannot be substituted by other kinases. Interestingly, we find that although the presence of the C-terminal PASTA domain is dispensable in the avirulent M. smegmatis, all four PASTA domains are essential in M. tuberculosis. The differential behavior of PknB vis-à-vis the number of essential PASTA domains and the specificity of kinase domain functions suggest that PknB-mediated growth and signaling events differ in virulent compared with avirulent mycobacteria. Mouse infection studies performed to determine the role of PknB in mediating pathogen survival in the host demonstrate that PknB is not only critical for growth of the pathogen in vitro but is also essential for the survival of the pathogen in the host.


Subject(s)
Mycobacterium tuberculosis/cytology , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/chemistry , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Animals , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cell Proliferation , Extracellular Space/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Intracellular Space/metabolism , Mice , Microbial Viability , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/genetics , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/physiology , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Protein Transport
6.
Curr Opin Immunol ; 60: 81-90, 2019 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31247378

ABSTRACT

The innate immune system has evolved to recognize diverse microbes and destroy them. At the same time, microbial pathogens undermine immunity to cause disease. Here, we highlight recent advances in understanding an antimicrobial pathway called LC3-associated phagocytosis (LAP), which combines features of autophagy with phagocytosis. Upon phagocytosis, many microbes, including bacteria, fungi, and parasites, are sequestered in an LC3-positive, single-membrane bound compartment, a hallmark of LAP. LAP depends upon NADPH oxidase activity at the incipient phagosome and culminates in lysosomal trafficking and microbial degradation. Most often LAP is an effective host defense, but some pathogens evade LAP or replicate successfully in this microenvironment. Here, we review how LAP targets microbial pathogens and strategies pathogens employ to circumvent LAP.


Subject(s)
Host-Pathogen Interactions , Microtubule-Associated Proteins/metabolism , Phagocytes/immunology , Phagocytes/metabolism , Phagocytosis/physiology , Animals , Biomarkers , Humans , Immunity, Innate , Macroautophagy , Oxidation-Reduction , Phagosomes/metabolism , Signal Transduction
7.
Autophagy ; 14(3): 552-554, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29313424

ABSTRACT

M. tuberculosis causes an enormous worldwide burden of disease. Its success depends upon subverting the antimicrobial capacity of macrophages. We have known for decades that M. tuberculosis impairs phagosomal trafficking to avoid lysosomal degradation, but the mechanism is unclear. Recent work has described a phagolysosomal pathway called LC3-associated phagocytosis (LAP), in which LC3 associates with microbe-containing phagosomes. Macrophage pathogen recognition receptors (PRRs) initiate LAP, and NADPH oxidase and RUBCN/RUBICON are required for LAP. We discovered that CpsA, an exported M. tuberculosis virulence factor, blocks LAP by interfering with recruitment of CYBB/NOX2 (cytochrome b-245, beta polypeptide) to the mycobacterial phagosome. In macrophages and in mice, M. tuberculosis mutants lacking cpsA are successfully cleared by NADPH oxidase and the ensuing LC3-associated lysosomal trafficking pathway. CpsA belongs to the LytR-CpsA-Psr family, which is found widely in Gram-positive bacilli. This family is known for its enzymatic role in cell wall assembly. However, our data suggest that CpsA inhibits CYBB oxidase independently of a cell wall function. Thus, CpsA may have evolved from an enzyme involved in cell wall integrity to an indispensable virulence factor that M. tuberculosis uses to evade the innate immune response.


Subject(s)
Autophagy/physiology , Macrophages/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/metabolism , Phagocytosis/physiology , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Host-Pathogen Interactions/physiology , Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins/metabolism , Mice , Phagosomes/metabolism
8.
Sci Rep ; 6: 25006, 2016 04 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27112593

ABSTRACT

A mammalian cell utilizes DNA methylation to modulate gene expression in response to environmental changes during development and differentiation. Aberrant DNA methylation changes as a correlate to diseased states like cancer, neurodegenerative conditions and cardiovascular diseases have been documented. Here we show genome-wide DNA methylation changes in macrophages infected with the pathogen M. tuberculosis. Majority of the affected genomic loci were hypermethylated in M. tuberculosis infected THP1 macrophages. Hotspots of differential DNA methylation were enriched in genes involved in immune response and chromatin reorganization. Importantly, DNA methylation changes were observed predominantly for cytosines present in non-CpG dinucleotide context. This observation was consistent with our previous finding that the mycobacterial DNA methyltransferase, Rv2966c, targets non-CpG dinucleotides in the host DNA during M. tuberculosis infection and reiterates the hypothesis that pathogenic bacteria use non-canonical epigenetic strategies during infection.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , DNA Methylation , Histones/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Tuberculosis/genetics , Chromosome Mapping , CpG Islands , Cytosine/chemistry , Epigenesis, Genetic , Gene Expression Regulation , Humans , Immunity , THP-1 Cells
9.
Sci Rep ; 3: 2264, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23877358

ABSTRACT

Mycobacterium tuberculosis modulates expression of various metabolism-related genes to adapt in the adverse host environment. The gene coding for M. tuberculosis S-adenosylhomocysteine hydrolase (Mtb-SahH) is essential for optimal growth and the protein product is involved in intermediary metabolism. However, the relevance of SahH in mycobacterial physiology is unknown. In this study, we analyze the role of Mtb-SahH in regulating homocysteine concentration in surrogate host Mycobacterium smegmatis. Mtb-SahH catalyzes reversible hydrolysis of S-adenosylhomocysteine to homocysteine and adenosine and we demonstrate that the conserved His363 residue is critical for bi-directional catalysis. Mtb-SahH is regulated by serine/threonine phosphorylation of multiple residues by M. tuberculosis PknB. Major phosphorylation events occur at contiguous residues Thr219, Thr220 and Thr221, which make pivotal contacts with cofactor NAD⁺. Consequently, phosphorylation negatively modulates affinity of enzyme towards NAD⁺ as well as SAH-synthesis. Thr219, Thr220 and Thr221 are essential for enzyme activity, and therefore, responsible for SahH-mediated regulation of homocysteine.


Subject(s)
Adenosylhomocysteinase/metabolism , Homocysteine/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Adenosylhomocysteinase/chemistry , Enzyme Activation , Histidine/chemistry , Hydrolysis , Kinetics , Metabolic Networks and Pathways , Models, Molecular , Mycobacterium/enzymology , Mycobacterium/metabolism , Phosphorylation , Protein Conformation , Reproducibility of Results
10.
PLoS One ; 6(3): e17871, 2011 Mar 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21423706

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The integrated functions of 11 Ser/Thr protein kinases (STPKs) and one phosphatase manipulate the phosphorylation levels of critical proteins in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. In this study, we show that the lone Ser/Thr phosphatase (PstP) is regulated through phosphorylation by STPKs. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: PstP is phosphorylated by PknA and PknB and phosphorylation is influenced by the presence of Zn(2+)-ions and inorganic phosphate (Pi). PstP is differentially phosphorylated on the cytosolic domain with Thr(137), Thr(141), Thr(174) and Thr(290) being the target residues of PknB while Thr(137) and Thr(174) are phosphorylated by PknA. The Mn(2+)-ion binding residues Asp(38) and Asp(229) are critical for the optimal activity of PstP and substitution of these residues affects its phosphorylation status. Native PstP and its phosphatase deficient mutant PstP(c) (D38G) are phosphorylated by PknA and PknB in E. coli and addition of Zn(2+)/Pi in the culture conditions affect the phosphorylation level of PstP. Interestingly, the phosphorylated phosphatase is more active than its unphosphorylated equivalent. CONCLUSIONS AND SIGNIFICANCE: This study establishes the novel mechanisms for regulation of mycobacterial Ser/Thr phosphatase. The results indicate that STPKs and PstP may regulate the signaling through mutually dependent mechanisms. Consequently, PstP phosphorylation may play a critical role in regulating its own activity. Since, the equilibrium between phosphorylated and non-phosphorylated states of mycobacterial proteins is still unexplained, understanding the regulation of PstP may help in deciphering the signal transduction pathways mediated by STPKs and the reversibility of the phenomena.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/enzymology , Protein Serine-Threonine Kinases/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Enzyme Assays , Escherichia coli/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Mutant Proteins/metabolism , Mycobacterium tuberculosis/drug effects , Phosphates/pharmacology , Phosphoamino Acids/metabolism , Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases/chemistry , Phosphoric Monoester Hydrolases/metabolism , Phosphorylation/drug effects , Reproducibility of Results , Zinc/pharmacology
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