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Mycobacteria that cause tuberculosis have retained ancestrally acquired genes for the biosynthesis of chemically diverse terpene nucleosides. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) makes a special molecule called 1-tuberculosinyladenosine (1-TbAd) that helps it survive in human immune cells by blocking their functions.
  • Researchers found that certain genes are important for making 1-TbAd and used new software to study how Mtb produces lipids, leading to discoveries of many related molecules.
  • They also discovered that the genes for making 1-TbAd are present in some bacteria outside the usual group known for tuberculosis, showing how these genes could have spread and suggesting that these molecules might be important for understanding human TB disease.

Article Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) releases the unusual terpene nucleoside 1-tuberculosinyladenosine (1-TbAd) to block lysosomal function and promote survival in human macrophages. Using conventional approaches, we found that genes Rv3377c and Rv3378c, but not Rv3376, were necessary for 1-TbAd biosynthesis. Here, we introduce linear models for mass spectrometry (limms) software as a next-generation lipidomics tool to study the essential functions of lipid biosynthetic enzymes on a whole-cell basis. Using limms, whole-cell lipid profiles deepened the phenotypic landscape of comparative mass spectrometry experiments and identified a large family of approximately 100 terpene nucleoside metabolites downstream of Rv3378c. We validated the identity of previously unknown adenine-, adenosine-, and lipid-modified tuberculosinol-containing molecules using synthetic chemistry and collisional mass spectrometry, including comprehensive profiling of bacterial lipids that fragment to adenine. We tracked terpene nucleoside genotypes and lipid phenotypes among Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex (MTC) species that did or did not evolve to productively infect either human or nonhuman mammals. Although 1-TbAd biosynthesis genes were thought to be restricted to the MTC, we identified the locus in unexpected species outside the MTC. Sequence analysis of the locus showed nucleotide usage characteristic of plasmids from plant-associated bacteria, clarifying the origin and timing of horizontal gene transfer to a pre-MTC progenitor. The data demonstrated correlation between high level terpene nucleoside biosynthesis and mycobacterial competence for human infection, and 2 mechanisms of 1-TbAd biosynthesis loss. Overall, the selective gain and evolutionary retention of tuberculosinyl metabolites in modern species that cause human TB suggest a role in human TB disease, and the newly discovered molecules represent candidate disease-specific biomarkers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11476799PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pbio.3002813DOI Listing

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