Chavadi_2011_J.Biol.Chem_286_24616

Reference

Title : Inactivation of tesA reduces cell wall lipid production and increases drug susceptibility in mycobacteria - Chavadi_2011_J.Biol.Chem_286_24616
Author(s) : Chavadi SS , Edupuganti UR , Vergnolle O , Fatima I , Singh SM , Soll CE , Quadri LE
Ref : Journal of Biological Chemistry , 286 :24616 , 2011
Abstract :

Phthiocerol dimycocerosates (PDIMs) and phenolic glycolipids (PGLs) are structurally related lipids noncovalently bound to the outer cell wall layer of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Mycobacterium leprae, and several opportunistic mycobacterial human pathogens. PDIMs and PGLs are important effectors of virulence. Elucidation of the biosynthesis of these complex lipids will not only expand our understanding of mycobacterial cell wall biosynthesis, but it may also illuminate potential routes to novel therapeutics against mycobacterial infections. We report the construction of an in-frame deletion mutant of tesA (encoding a type II thioesterase) in the opportunistic human pathogen Mycobacterium marinum and the characterization of this mutant and its corresponding complemented strain control in terms of PDIM and PGL production. The growth and antibiotic susceptibility of these strains were also probed and compared with the parental wild-type strain. We show that deletion of tesA leads to a mutant that produces only traces of PDIMs and PGLs, has a slight growth yield increase and displays a substantial hypersusceptibility to several antibiotics. We also provide a robust model for the three-dimensional structure of M. marinum TesA (TesAmm) and demonstrate that a Ser-to-Ala substitution in the predicted catalytic Ser of TesAmm renders a mutant that recapitulates the phenotype of the tesA deletion mutant. Overall, our studies demonstrate a critical role for tesA in mycobacterial biology, advance our understanding of the biosynthesis of an important group of polyketide synthase-derived mycobacterial lipids, and suggest that drugs aimed at blocking PDIM and/or PGL production might synergize with antibiotic therapy in the control of mycobacterial infections.

PubMedSearch : Chavadi_2011_J.Biol.Chem_286_24616
PubMedID: 21592957
Gene_locus related to this paper: myctu-yt28 , mycmm-tesa

Related information

Gene_locus myctu-yt28    mycmm-tesa

Citations formats

Chavadi SS, Edupuganti UR, Vergnolle O, Fatima I, Singh SM, Soll CE, Quadri LE (2011)
Inactivation of tesA reduces cell wall lipid production and increases drug susceptibility in mycobacteria
Journal of Biological Chemistry 286 :24616

Chavadi SS, Edupuganti UR, Vergnolle O, Fatima I, Singh SM, Soll CE, Quadri LE (2011)
Journal of Biological Chemistry 286 :24616