Affiliation:
1. School of Biomedical and Molecular Sciences, University of Surrey, Guildford GU2 7XH, United Kingdom
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The adaptation of the tubercle bacillus to the host environment is likely to involve a complex set of gene regulatory events and physiological switches in response to environmental signals. In order to deconstruct the physiological state of
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
in vivo, we used a chemostat model to study a single aspect of the organism's in vivo state, slow growth.
Mycobacterium bovis
BCG was cultivated at high and low growth rates in a carbon-limited chemostat, and transcriptomic analysis was performed to identify the gene regulation events associated with slow growth. The results demonstrated that slow growth was associated with the induction of expression of several genes of the dormancy survival regulon. There was also a striking overlap between the transcriptomic profile of BCG in the chemostat model and the response of
M. tuberculosis
to growth in the macrophage, implying that a significant component of the response of the pathogen to the macrophage environment is the response to slow growth in carbon-limited conditions. This demonstrated the importance of adaptation to a low growth rate to the virulence strategy of
M. tuberculosis
and also the value of the chemostat model for deconstructing components of the in vivo state of this important pathogen.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
44 articles.
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