Affiliation:
1. Department of Molecular Microbiology and Immunology1 and
2. Division of Infectious Diseases,2 Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland 21205
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The genetic basis of isoniazid (INH) resistance remains unknown for a significant proportion of clinical isolates. To identify genes which might confer resistance by detoxifying or sequestering INH, we transformed the
Escherichia coli oxyR
mutant, which is relatively sensitive to INH, with a
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
plasmid library and selected for INH-resistant clones. Three genes were identified and called
ceo
for their ability to complement the
Escherichia coli oxyR
mutant.
ceoA
was the previously identified
M. tuberculosis glf
gene, which encodes a 399-amino-acid NAD
+
- and flavin adenine dinucleotide-requiring enzyme responsible for catalyzing the conversion of UDP-galactopyranose to UDP-galactofuranose. The proteins encoded by the
ceoBC
pair were homologous with one another and with the N terminus of the potassium uptake regulatory protein TrkA. Each of the three Ceo proteins contains a motif common to NAD
+
binding pockets. Overexpression of the
M. tuberculosis glf
gene by placing it under the control of the
hsp60
promoter on a multicopy plasmid in
Mycobacterium bovis
BCG produced a strain for which the INH MIC was increased 50% compared to that for the control strains, while similar overexpression of the
ceoBC
pair had no effect on INH susceptibility in BCG. Mycobacterial extracts containing the overexpressed Glf protein did not bind radiolabeled INH directly, suggesting a more complex mechanism than the binding of unmodified INH. Our results support the hypothesis that upregulated mycobacterial proteins such as Glf may contribute to INH resistance in
M. tuberculosis
by binding a modified form of INH or by sequestering a factor such as NAD
+
required for INH activity.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
Cited by
29 articles.
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