Urease Activity Represents an Alternative Pathway for Mycobacterium tuberculosis Nitrogen Metabolism

Author:

Lin Wenwei,Mathys Vanessa,Ang Emily Lei Yin,Koh Vanessa Hui Qi,Martínez Gómez Julia María,Ang Michelle Lay Teng,Zainul Rahim Siti Zarina,Tan Mai Ping,Pethe Kevin,Alonso Sylvie

Abstract

ABSTRACTUrease represents a critical virulence factor for some bacterial species through its alkalizing effect, which helps neutralize the acidic microenvironment of the pathogen. In addition, urease serves as a nitrogen source provider for bacterial growth. Pathogenic mycobacteria express a functional urease, but its role during infection has yet to be characterized. In this study, we constructed a urease-deficientMycobacterium tuberculosisstrain and confirmed the alkalizing effect of the urease activity within the mycobacterium-containing vacuole in resting macrophages but not in the more acidic phagolysosomal compartment of activated macrophages. However, the urease-mediated alkalizing effect did not confer any growth advantage onM. tuberculosisin macrophages, as evidenced by comparable growth profiles for the mutant, wild-type (WT), and complemented strains. In contrast, the urease-deficient mutant exhibited impairedin vitrogrowth compared to the WT and complemented strains when urea was the sole source of nitrogen. Substantial amounts of ammonia were produced by the WT and complemented strains, but not with the urease-deficient mutant, which represents the actual nitrogen source for mycobacterial growth. However, the urease-deficient mutant displayed parental colonization profiles in the lungs, spleen, and liver in mice. Together, our data demonstrate a role for the urease activity inM. tuberculosisnitrogen metabolism that could be crucial for the pathogen's survival in nutrient-limited microenvironments where urea is the sole nitrogen source. Our work supports the notion thatM. tuberculosisvirulence correlates with its unique metabolic versatility and ability to utilize virtually any carbon and nitrogen sources available in its environment.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology

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