Mycobacterium tuberculosis can cocatabolize a range of carbon sources. Fatty acids are among the carbons available inside the host's macrophages. Here, we investigated the metabolic changes of the fatty acid-induced dormancy-like state of and its involvement in the acquisition of drug tolerance. We conducted metabolomics profiling using a phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase (PEPCK)-deficient strain in an acetate-induced dormancy-like state, highlighting an overaccumulation of methylcitrate cycle (MCC) intermediates that correlates with enhanced drug tolerance against isoniazid and bedaquiline. Further metabolomics analyses of two mutants, an ICL knockdown (KD) strain and PrpD knockout (KO) strain, each lacking an MCC enzyme-isocitrate lyase (ICL) and 2-methylcitrate dehydratase (PrpD), respectively-were conducted after treatment with antibiotics. The ICL KD strain, which lacks the last enzyme of the MCC, showed an overaccumulation of MCC intermediates and a high level of drug tolerance. The PrpD KO strain, however, failed to accumulate MCC intermediates as it lacks the second step of the MCC and showed only a minor level of drug tolerance compared to the ICL KD mutant and its parental strain (CDC1551). Notably, addition of authentic 2-methylisocitrate, an MCC intermediate, improved the drug tolerance against antibiotics even in glycerol medium. Furthermore, wild-type displayed levels of drug tolerance when cultured in acetate medium significantly greater than those in glycerol medium. Taken together, the fatty acid-induced dormancy-like state remodels the central carbon metabolism of that is functionally relevant to acquisition of drug tolerance. Understanding the mechanisms underlying adaptive strategies to achieve drug tolerance is crucial for the identification of new targets and the development of new drugs. Here, we show that acetate medium triggers a drug-tolerant state in when challenged with antituberculosis (anti-TB) drugs. This carbon-induced drug-tolerant state is linked to an accumulation of the methylcitrate cycle (MCC) intermediates, whose role was previously known as a detox pathway for propionate metabolism. Three mutant strains with mutations in gluconeogenesis and MCC were used to investigate the correlation between drug tolerance and the accumulation of MCC metabolites. We herein report a new role of the MCC used to provide a survival advantage to as a species against both anti-TB drugs upon specific carbon sources.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8749430 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/mbio.03559-21 | DOI Listing |
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