AI Article Synopsis

  • The cell envelope of mycobacteria is crucial for their survival and pathogenicity, heavily involving phosphatidylinositol mannosides.
  • Deletion of a gene related to phosphatidylinositol hexamannoside biosynthesis leads to smaller colony sizes, prompting the isolation of suppressor mutants that restore wild-type sizes but exhibit altered lipomannan/lipoarabinomannan composition.
  • Genome sequencing identified mutations in key biosynthesis genes and a novel gene (LmeA), pointing to its role in regulating mannan chain length and its localization to the cell envelope, highlighting its evolutionary conservation across related species.

Article Abstract

The integrity of the distinguishing, multilaminate cell envelope surrounding mycobacteria is critical to their survival and pathogenesis. The prevalence of phosphatidylinositol mannosides in the cell envelope suggests an important role in the mycobacterial life cycle. Indeed, deletion of the gene (Δ) encoding the first committed step in phosphatidylinositol hexamannoside biosynthesis in results in the formation of smaller colonies than wild-type colonies on Middlebrook 7H10 agar. To further investigate potential contributors to cell-envelope mannan biosynthesis while taking advantage of this colony morphology defect, we isolated spontaneous suppressor mutants of Δ that reverted to wild-type colony size. Of 22 suppressor mutants, 6 accumulated significantly shorter lipomannan or lipoarabinomannan. Genome sequencing of these mutants revealed mutations in genes involved in the lipomannan/lipoarabinomannan biosynthesis, such as those encoding the arabinosyltransferase EmbC and the mannosyltransferase MptA. Furthermore, we identified three mutants carrying a mutation in a previously uncharacterized gene, _, that we designated Complementation of these suppressor mutants with restored the original Δ phenotypes and deletion of in wild-type resulted in smaller lipomannan, as observed in the suppressor mutants. LmeA carries a predicted N-terminal signal peptide, and density gradient fractionation and detergent extractability experiments indicated that LmeA localizes to the cell envelope. Using a lipid ELISA, we found that LmeA binds to plasma membrane phospholipids, such as phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylinositol. LmeA is widespread throughout the Corynebacteriales; therefore, we concluded that LmeA is an evolutionarily conserved cell-envelope protein critical for controlling the mannan chain length of lipomannan/lipoarabinomannan.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5655517PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M117.804377DOI Listing

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