Affiliation:
1. The University of Houston, Department of Biology and Biochemistry, Houston, Texas, USA
Abstract
Bacteria tolerate severe external stresses, including antibiotics, through a nonreplicative persistent (NRP) survival state, yet the proteins regulating this survival state are largely unknown. We show a specific universal stress protein (UspA616) controls the NRP state in
Micrococcus luteus
. Usps are widely conserved across bacteria, but their biological function(s) has remained elusive. UspA616 inactivation renders
M. luteus
susceptible to stress: bacteria die instead of adapting through the NRP state. UspA616 regulates malate synthase and isocitrate lyase, glyoxylate pathway enzymes important for chronic
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
infection. These data show that UspA616 regulates NRP stress survival in
M. luteus
and suggest a function for homologous proteins in other bacteria. Importantly, inhibitors of UspA616 and homologs may render NRP bacteria more susceptible to stresses, including current antibiotics.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
12 articles.
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