Affiliation:
1. Department of Biomedical Sciences, University of Albany School of Public Health
2. Wadsworth Center, Albany, New York 12201-2002
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Tuberculosis remains a leading killer worldwide, and new approaches for its treatment and prevention are urgently needed. This effort will benefit greatly from a better understanding of gene regulation in
Mycobacterium tuberculosis,
particularly with respect to this pathogen's response to its host environment. We examined the behavior of two promoters from the divergently transcribed
M. tuberculosis
genes
acr
/
hsp
X/Rv2031c (α-crystallin homolog) and Rv2032/
acg
(
acr
-coregulated gene) by using a promoter-GFP fusion assay in
Mycobacterium bovis
BCG. We found that Rv2032 is a novel macrophage-induced gene whose expression is coregulated with that of
acr
. Relative levels of intracellular induction for both promoters were significantly affected by shallow standing versus shaking bacterial culture conditions prior to macrophage infection, and both promoters were strongly induced under low oxygen conditions. Deletion analyses showed that DNA sequences within a 43-bp region were required for expression of these promoters under all conditions. Multiple sequence alignment and database searches performed with PROBE indicated that Rv2032 is one of eight
M. tuberculosis
genes of previously unknown function that belong to an unusual superfamily of classical nitroreductases, which may have a role for bacteria within the host environment. These findings show that mycobacterial culture conditions can greatly influence the results and interpretation of subsequent gene regulation experiments. We propose that these differences might be exploited for dissection of the regulatory factors that affect mycobacterial gene expression within the host.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
70 articles.
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