肺结核
结核分枝杆菌
微生物学
病菌
蛋白酶体
免疫系统
免疫学
突变体
医学
病毒学
化学
生物
生物化学
病理
基因
作者
Gina Limón,Nora M Samhadaneh,Alejandro Pironti,K. Heran Darwin
出处
期刊:MBio
[American Society for Microbiology]
日期:2023-06-23
标识
DOI:10.1128/mbio.00363-23
摘要
ABSTRACT Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a major human pathogen and the causative agent of tuberculosis disease. M. tuberculosis is able to persist in the face of host-derived antimicrobial molecules nitric oxide (NO) and copper (Cu). However, M. tuberculosis with defective proteasome activity is highly sensitive to NO and Cu, making the proteasome an attractive target for drug development. Previous work linked NO susceptibility with the accumulation of para -hydroxybenzaldehyde ( p HBA) in M. tuberculosis mutants with defective proteasomal degradation. In this study, we found that p HBA accumulation was also responsible for Cu sensitivity in these strains. We showed that exogenous addition of p HBA to wild-type M. tuberculosis cultures sensitized bacteria to Cu to a degree similar to that of a proteasomal degradation mutant. We determined that p HBA reduced the production and function of critical Cu resistance proteins of the r egulated i n c opper r epressor (RicR) regulon. Furthermore, we extended these Cu-sensitizing effects to an aldehyde that M. tuberculosis may face within the macrophage. Collectively, this study is the first to mechanistically propose how aldehydes can render M. tuberculosis susceptible to an existing host defense and could support a broader role for aldehydes in controlling M. tuberculosis infections. IMPORTANCE M. tuberculosis is a leading cause of death by a single infectious agent, causing 1.5 million deaths annually. An effective vaccine for M. tuberculosis infections is currently lacking, and prior infection does not typically provide robust immunity to subsequent infections. Nonetheless, immunocompetent humans can control M. tuberculosis infections for decades. For these reasons, a clear understanding of how mammalian immunity inhibits mycobacterial growth is warranted. In this study, we show aldehydes can increase M. tuberculosis susceptibility to copper, an established antibacterial metal used by immune cells to control M. tuberculosis and other microbes. Given that activated macrophages produce increased amounts of aldehydes during infection, we propose host-derived aldehydes may help control bacterial infections, making aldehydes a previously unappreciated antimicrobial defense.
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