Affiliation:
1. Division of Infectious Diseases
2. Immunology Program
3. the Nuclear Magnetic Resonance Analytical Core Facility, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, New York 10065
Abstract
ABSTRACT
The
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
cell envelope contains a wide variety of lipids and glycolipids, including mycolic acids, long-chain branched fatty acids that are decorated by cyclopropane rings. Genetic analysis of the mycolate methyltransferase family has been a powerful approach to assign functions to each of these enzymes but has failed to reveal the origin of
cis
cyclopropanation of the oxygenated mycolates. Here we examine potential redundancy between mycolic acid methyltransferases by generating and analyzing
M. tuberculosis
strains lacking
mmaA2
and
cmaA2
,
mmaA2
and
cmaA1
, or
mmaA1
alone.
M. tuberculosis
lacking both
cmaA2
and
mmaA2
cannot
cis
cyclopropanate methoxymycolates or ketomycolates, phenotypes not shared by the
mmaA2
and
cmaA2
single mutants. In contrast, a combined loss of
cmaA1
and
mmaA2
had no effect on mycolic acid modification compared to results with a loss of
mmaA2
alone. Deletion of
mmaA1
from
M. tuberculosis
abolishes
trans
cyclopropanation without accumulation of
trans
-unsaturated oxygenated mycolates, placing MmaA1 in the biosynthetic pathway for
trans
-cyclopropanated oxygenated mycolates before CmaA2. These results define new functions for the mycolic acid methyltransferases of
M. tuberculosis
and indicate a substantial redundancy of function for MmaA2 and CmaA2, the latter of which can function as both a
cis
and
trans
cyclopropane synthase for the oxygenated mycolates.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Molecular Biology,Microbiology
Cited by
49 articles.
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