Transcriptional Profiling of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Exposed to In Vitro Lysosomal Stress.
Lin. Wenwei W; de Sessions. Paola Florez PF; Teoh. Garrett Hor Keong GH; Mohamed. Ahmad Naim Nazri AN; Zhu. Yuan O YO; Koh. Vanessa Hui Qi VH; Ang. Michelle Lay Teng ML; Dedon. Peter C PC; Hibberd. Martin Lloyd ML; Alonso. Sylvie S
Key Findings
- M. tuberculosis alters many genes when exposed to lysosomal stress, including stress response and metabolism genes.
- The glgE‑mediated glucan synthesis pathway and VapBC toxin‑antitoxin systems are part of the bacteria’s response to lysosomal conditions.
- Removing the Rv1258c efflux pump gene makes the bacteria more sensitive to the antimicrobial peptide LL‑37 and reduces survival in macrophages.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers and self‑experimenters, this research doesn’t provide actionable tips or protocols for improving longevity, metabolism, or performance. It mainly informs drug‑development scientists about potential bacterial targets, not about using LL‑37 as a supplement or therapy in healthy people.
Summary
The study looked at how the tuberculosis bacteria change their gene activity when they’re put into a harsh environment inside immune cells, and it found that a specific gene (Rv1258c) helps the bacteria resist a natural antimicrobial peptide called LL‑37. Deleting this gene made the bacteria more vulnerable to LL‑37 and to killing by immune cells, but the research is focused on bacterial infection mechanisms, not on human health or supplement use.
Abstract
Increasing experimental evidence supports the idea that Mycobacterium tuberculosis has evolved strategies to survive within lysosomes of activated macrophages. To further our knowledge of M. tuberculosis response to the hostile lysosomal environment, we profiled the global transcriptional activity of M. tuberculosis when exposed to the lysosomal soluble fraction (SF) prepared from activated macrophages. Transcriptome sequencing (RNA-seq) analysis was performed using various incubation conditions, ranging from noninhibitory to cidal based on the mycobacterial replication or killing profile. Under inhibitory conditions that led to the absence of apparent mycobacterial replication, M. tuberculosis expressed a unique transcriptome with modulation of genes involved in general stress response, metabolic reprogramming, respiration, oxidative stress, dormancy response, and virulence. The transcription pattern also indicates characteristic cell wall remodeling with the possible outcomes of increased infectivity, intrinsic resistance to antibiotics, and subversion of the host immune system. Among the lysosome-specific responses, we identified the glgE-mediated 1,4 α-glucan synthesis pathway and a defined group of VapBC toxin/anti-toxin systems, both of which represent toxicity mechanisms that potentially can be exploited for killing intracellular mycobacteria. A meta-analysis including previously reported transcriptomic studies in macrophage infection and in vitro stress models was conducted to identify overlapping and nonoverlapping pathways. Finally, the Tap efflux pump-encoding gene Rv1258c was selected for validation. An M. tuberculosis ΔRv1258c mutant was constructed and displayed increased susceptibility to killing by lysosomal SF and the antimicrobial peptide LL-37, as well as attenuated survival in primary murine macrophages and human macrophage cell line THP-1.
Study Information
pubmed
2016
2016-08-19T00:00:00.000Z
10.1128/iai.00072-16