The Stringent Response of <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> Is Required for Long-Term SurvivalThe stringent response utilizes hyperphosphorylated guanine [(p)ppGpp] as a signaling molecule to control bacterial gene expression involved in long-term survival under starvation conditions. In gram-negative bacteria, (p)ppGpp is produced by the activity of the related RelA and SpoT proteins. Mycobacterium tuberculosis contains a single homolog of these proteins (Rel(Mtb)) and responds to nutrient starvation by producing (p)ppGpp. A rel(Mtb) knockout strain was constructed in a virulent strain of M. tuberculosis, H37Rv, by allelic replacement. The rel(Mtb) mutant displayed a significantly slower aerobic growth rate than the wild type in synthetic liquid media, whether rich or minimal. The growth rate of the wild type was equivalent to that of the mutant when citrate or phospholipid was employed as the sole carbon source. These two organisms also showed identical growth rates within a human macrophage-like cell line. These results suggest that the in vivo carbon source does not represent a stressful condition for the bacilli, since it appears to be utilized in a similar Rel(Mtb)-independent manner. In vitro growth in liquid media represents a condition that benefits from Rel(Mtb)-mediated adaptation. Long-term survival of the rel(Mtb) mutant during in vitro starvation or nutrient run out in normal media was significantly impaired compared to that in the wild type. In addition, the mutant was significantly less able to survive extended anaerobic incubation than the wild-type virulent organism. Thus, the Rel(Mtb) protein is required for long-term survival of pathogenic mycobacteria under starvation conditions.
DNA repair in <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i>. What have we learnt from the genome sequence?The genome sequence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis was analysed by searching for homologues of genes known to be involved in the reversal or repair of DNA damage in Escherichia coli and related organisms. Genes necessary to perform nucleotide excision repair (NER), base excision repair (BER), recombination, and SOS repair and mutagenesis were identified. In particular, all of the genes known to be directly involved in the repair of oxidative and alkylative damage are present in M. tuberculosis. In contrast, we failed to identify homologues of genes involved in mismatch repair. This finding has potentially significant implications with respect to genome stability, strain variability at repeat loci and the emergence of chromosomally encoded drug resistance mutations.
Monooxygenase-like sequence of a Rhodococcus equi gene conferring increased resistance to rifampin by inactivating this antibioticSusan J. Andersen, Selwyn Quan, Bhavna Gowan et al.|Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy|1997 A DNA clone from Rhodococcus equi conferring low-level rifampin resistance through the ability to inactivate this antibiotic via its decomposition was identified. The iri (inactivation of rifampin) gene consisted of an open reading frame of 1,437 bp encoding a 479-amino-acid sequence strongly resembling those of monooxygenases acting upon phenolic compounds or involved in polyketide antibiotic synthesis. When expressed in Escherichia coli, the gene conferred resistance to a > 50-micrograms/ml concentration of the drug.
SOS induction in mycobacteria: analysis of the DNA‐binding activity of a LexA‐like repressor and its role in DNA damage induction of the <i>recA</i> gene from <i>Mycobacterium smegmatis</i>The protein encoded by the lexA gene from Mycobacterium leprae was overproduced in Escherichia coli. The recombinant protein bound to the promoter regions of the M. leprae lexA, M. leprae recA and M. smegmatis recA genes at sites with the sequences 5'-GAACACATGTTT and 5'-GAACAGGTGTTC, which belong to the 'Cheo box' family of binding sites recognized by the SOS repressor from Bacillus subtilis. Gel mobility shift assays were used to confirm that proteins with the same site specificity of DNA binding are also present in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and M. smegmatis. Complex formation was impaired by mutagenic disruption of the dyad symmetry of the M. smegmatis recA Cheo box. LexA binding was also inhibited by preincubation of the M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis extracts with anti-M. leprae LexA antibodies, suggesting that the mycobacterial LexA proteins are functionally conserved at the level of DNA binding. Finally, exposure of M. smegmatis to DNA-damaging agents resulted in induction of the M. smegmatis recA promoter with concomitant loss of DNA binding of LexA to its Cheo box, confirming that this organism possesses the key regulatory elements of a functional SOS induction system.
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