Affiliation:
1. Department of Microbiology and Molecular Genetics, Michigan State University , East Lansing, Michigan, USA
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Mycobacteria can colonize environments where the availability of metal ions is limited. Biological or inorganic chelators play an important role in limiting metal availability, and we developed a model to examine
Mycobacterium smegmatis
survival in the presence of the chelator sodium citrate. We observed that instead of restricting
M. smegmatis
growth, concentrated sodium citrate killed
M. smegmatis
. RNAseq analysis during sodium citrate treatment revealed transcriptional signatures of metal starvation and hyperosmotic stress. Notably, metal starvation and hyperosmotic stress, individually, do not kill
M. smegmatis
under these conditions. A forward genetic transposon selection was conducted to examine why sodium citrate was lethal, and several sodium-citrate-tolerant mutants were isolated. Based on the identity of three tolerant mutants,
mgtE
,
treZ
, and
fadD6,
we propose a dual stress model of killing by sodium citrate, where sodium citrate chelate metals from the cell envelope and then osmotic stress in combination with a weakened cell envelope causes cell lysis. This sodium citrate tolerance screen identified mutants in several other genes with no known function, with most conserved in the pathogen
M. tuberculosis
. Therefore, this model will serve as a basis to define their functions, potentially in maintaining cell wall integrity, cation homeostasis, or osmotolerance.
IMPORTANCE
Bacteria require mechanisms to adapt to environments with differing metal availability. When
Mycobacterium smegmatis
is treated with high concentrations of the metal chelator sodium citrate, the bacteria are killed. To define the mechanisms underlying killing by sodium citrate, we conducted a genetic selection and observed tolerance to killing in mutants of the
mgtE
magnesium transporter. Further characterization studies support a model where killing by sodium citrate is driven by a weakened cell wall and osmotic stress, that in combination cause cell lysis.
Funder
HHS | National Institutes of Health
AgBioResearch, Michigan State University
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology