Affiliation:
1. Institute of Microbial Technology, Sector 39 A, Chandigarh 160036, India
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The success of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
as one of the dreaded human pathogens lies in its ability to utilize different defense mechanisms in response to the varied environmental challenges during the course of its intracellular infection, latency, and reactivation cycle. Truncated hemoglobins trHbN and trHbO are thought to play pivotal roles in the cellular metabolism of this organism during stress and hypoxia. To delineate the genetic regulation of the
M. tuberculosis
hemoglobins, transcriptional fusions of the promoters of the
glbN
and
glbO
genes with green fluorescent protein were constructed, and their responses were monitored in
Mycobacterium smegmatis
and
M. tuberculosis
H37Ra exposed to environmental stresses in vitro and in
M. tuberculosis
H37Ra after in vivo growth inside macrophages. The
glbN
promoter activity increased substantially during stationary phase and was nearly 3- to 3.5-fold higher than the activity of the
glbO
promoter, which remained more or less constant during different growth phases in
M. smegmatis
, as well as in
M. tuberculosis
H37Ra. In both mycobacterial hosts, the
glbN
promoter activity was induced 1.5- to 2-fold by the general nitrosative stress inducer, nitrite, as well as the NO releaser, sodium nitroprusside (SNP). The
glbO
promoter was more responsive to nitrite than to SNP, although the overall increase in its activity was much less than that of the
glbN
promoter. Additionally, the
glbN
promoter remained insensitive to the oxidative stress generated by H
2
O
2
, but the
glbO
promoter activity increased nearly 1.5-fold under similar conditions, suggesting that the trHb gene promoters are regulated differently under nitrosative and oxidative stress conditions. In contrast, transition metal-induced hypoxia enhanced the activity of both the
glbN
and
glbO
promoters at all growth phases; the
glbO
promoter was induced ∼2.3-fold, which was found to be the highest value for this promoter under all the conditions evaluated. Addition of iron along with nickel reversed the induction in both cases. Interestingly, a concentration-dependent decrease in the activity of both trHb gene promoters was observed when the levels of iron in the growth media were depleted by addition of an iron chelator. These results suggested that an iron/heme-containing oxygen sensor is involved in the modulation of the trHb gene promoter activities directly or indirectly in conjunction with other cellular factors. The modes of promoter regulation under different physiological conditions were found to be similar for the trHbs in both
M. smegmatis
and
M. tuberculosis
H37Ra, indicating that the promoters might be regulated by components that are common to the two systems. Confocal microscopy of THP-1 macrophages infected with
M. tuberculosis
carrying the trHb gene promoter fusions showed that there was a significant level of promoter activity during intracellular growth in macrophages. Time course evaluation of the promoter activity after various times up to 48 h by fluorescence-activated cell sorting analysis of the intracellular
M. tuberculosis
cells indicated that the
glbN
promoter was active at all time points assessed, whereas the activity of the
glbO
promoter remained at a steady-state level up to 24 h postinfection and increased ∼2-fold after 48 h of infection. Thus, the overall regulation pattern of the
M. tuberculosis
trHb gene promoters correlates not only with the stresses that the tubercle bacillus is likely to encounter once it is in the macrophage environment but also with our current knowledge of their functions. The in vivo studies that demonstrated for the first time expression of trHbs during macrophage infection of
M. tuberculosis
strongly indicate that the hemoglobins are required, and thus important, during the intracellular phase of the bacterial cycle. The present study of transcriptional regulation of
M. tuberculosis
hemoglobins in vitro under various stress conditions and in vivo after macrophage infection supports the hypothesis that biosynthesis of both trHbs (trHbN and trHbO) in the native host is regulated via the environmental signals that the tubercle bacillus receives during macrophage infection and growth in its human host.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology
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