Lysine acetylation of DosR regulates the hypoxia response of Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection remains a large global public health problem. One striking characteristic of Mtb is its ability to adapt to hypoxia and trigger the ensuing transition to a dormant state for persistent infection, but how the hypoxia response of Mtb is...

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Veröffentlicht in:Emerging microbes & infections 2018-03, Vol.7 (1), p.1-14
Hauptverfasser: Yang, Hua, Sha, Wei, Liu, Zhonghua, Tang, Tianqi, Liu, Haipeng, Qin, Lianhua, Cui, Zhenling, Chen, Jianxia, Liu, Feng, Zheng, Ruijuan, Huang, Xiaochen, Wang, Jie, Feng, Yonghong, Ge, Baoxue
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tuberculosis caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) infection remains a large global public health problem. One striking characteristic of Mtb is its ability to adapt to hypoxia and trigger the ensuing transition to a dormant state for persistent infection, but how the hypoxia response of Mtb is regulated remains largely unknown. Here we performed a quantitative acetylome analysis to compare the acetylation profile of Mtb under aeration and hypoxia, and showed that 377 acetylation sites in 269 Mtb proteins were significantly changed under hypoxia. In particular, deacetylation of dormancy survival regulator (DosR) at K182 promoted the hypoxia response in Mtb and enhanced the transcription of DosR-targeted genes. Mechanistically, recombinant DosR K182R protein demonstrated enhanced DNA-binding activity in comparison with DosR K182Q protein. Moreover, Rv0998 was identified as an acetyltransferase that mediates the acetylation of DosR at K182. Deletion of Rv0998 also promoted the adaptation of Mtb to hypoxia and the transcription of DosR-targeted genes. Mice infected with an Mtb strain containing acetylation-defective DosR K182R had much lower bacterial counts and less severe histopathological impairments compared with those infected with the wild-type strain. Our findings suggest that hypoxia induces the deacetylation of DosR, which in turn increases its DNA-binding ability to promote the transcription of target genes, allowing Mtb to shift to dormancy under hypoxia.
ISSN:2222-1751
2222-1751
DOI:10.1038/s41426-018-0032-2