| Literature DB >> 21345183 |
Rashmi Pasricha1, Amita Chandolia, Prija Ponnan, Neeraj Kumar Saini, Sangeeta Sharma, Madhu Chopra, Mandira Varma Basil, Vani Brahmachari, Mridula Bose.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The presence of four mammalian cell entry (mce) operons in Mycobacterium tuberculosis suggests the essentiality of the functions of the genes in these operons. The differential expression of the four mce operons in different phases of in vitro growth and in infected animals reported earlier from our laboratory further justifies the apparent redundancy for these genes in the genome.Here we investigate the extent of polymorphism in eight genes in the mce1 and mce4 operons of M. tuberculosis from four standard reference strains (H37Rv, H37Ra, LVS (Low Virulent Strain) and BCG) and 112 clinical isolates varying in their drug susceptibility profile, analysed by direct sequencing and Sequenom MassARRAY platform.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21345183 PMCID: PMC3050694 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2180-11-41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Figure 1Primers of . Schematic representation of the position of overlapping primers to completely sequence the genes of (A) mce1 operon (B) mce4 operon.
Polymorphisms in the genes of mce1 operon.
| C14T | Thr5Ile | NONE | (25.96) | (29.16) | (29.09) | (41.76) | (15.78) | |
| T154G | Tyr52Asp | NONE | (0.9) | NONE | (1.72) | NONE | (5.26) | |
| C1075T | Pr0359Ser | Tyr441Tyr | (1.87) | (4) | NONE | NONE | NONE | |
| T536C | Ile179Thr | NONE | (0.9) | (3.8) | NONE | NONE | NONE | |
| G636C | Glu212Asp | NONE | (0.9) | (3.8) | NONE | NONE | NONE | |
| NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | |
| NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | |
| G129T | Lys43Asn | NONE | (0.9) | (4) | NONE | NONE | NONE | |
Frequency of single nucleotide polymorphisms detected in the genes of mce1 operon. The nucleotide changes and the corresponding changes in amino acids are shown here. The frequency of SNPs was calculated from 112 clinical isolates. The data has been subdivided according to the drug susceptibility profile.
The single letter nucleotide designations used are as follows: A, adenine; C, cytosine; G, guanine and T, thymidine. The three letter amino acid designations used are as follows: Thr, threonine; Ile, isoleucine; Tyr, tyrosine; Asp, aspartic acid; Pro, proline; Ser, serine; Glu, glutamic acid; Lys, lysine and Asn, asparagine.
DS: drug sensitive, DR: drug resistant, SDR: single drug resistant, MDR TB: Multi drug resistant
Polymorphisms in the genes of mce4 operon.
| G18T | NONE | Ala6Ala | (25.49) | (20.83) | (29.62) | (41.76) | (21.05) | |
| C21T | NONE | Ile7Ile | (3.7) | (8) | (3.44) | (5.88) | NONE | |
| T32G | Val11Gly | Phe291Phe | (2.25) | (4.55) | NONE | NONE | NONE | |
| NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | NONE | |
| A136C | Thr46Pro | NONE | (3.75) | (8.33) | NONE | (5.88) | (5.26) | |
| G35A | Arg12Gln | NONE | (1.25) | (7.69) | NONE | NONE | NONE | |
| C798T | Thr339Lys | Ala266Ala | (26.47) | (29.09) | (30.9) | (31.57) | (31.07) | |
| C117A | Pro405Lys | Thr39Thr | (8.75) | (9.09) | (7.3) | (10.52) | (5.09) | |
Frequency of single nucleotide polymorphisms detected in the genes of mce4 operon. The nucleotide changes and the corresponding changes in amino acids are shown here. The frequency of SNPs was calculated from 112 clinical isolates. The data has been subdivided according to the drug susceptibility profile.
The single letter nucleotide designations used are as follows: A, adenine; C, cytosine; G, guanine and T, thymidine. The three letter amino acid designations used are as follows Ala, alanine; Ile, isoleucine; Pro, proline; Val, valine; Gly, glycine; Phe, phenylalanine; Thr, threonine; Arg, arginine; Ser; serine; Gln, glutamine and Lys, lysine.
DS: drug sensitive, DR: drug resistant, SDR: single drug resistant, MDR TB: Multi drug resistant
Codon usage in mce1 and mce4 operons
| Operon | Gene name (Accession Number) | Wild type codon | Polymorphic codon |
|---|---|---|---|
| TAC | TA | ||
| GCG | GC | ||
| ATC | AT | ||
| TTC | TT | ||
| GCC | GC | ||
| ACC | AC | ||
The codon usage in the polymorphic regions is shown here. The synonymous changes in the nucleotide sequence, when analysed bioinformatically through Gene Runner software version 3.05 (Hastings Software, Inc.) predicts the usage of less preferred codon which could reflect upon the expression efficiency of the protein encoded by the gene.
Nucleotide highlighted in bold indicates the altered nucleotide.
Figure 2Wild and mutant protein structure of Mce1A. Structure of (A) wild (orange ribbon) and (B) Pro359Ser mutant (blue ribbon) proteins showing Pro359 (green) in wild protein and Ser359 (pink) in the mutant protein represented in ball and stick. The figure was prepared using Discovery studio 2.5 (DS Modeling 2.5, Accelrys Inc.: San Diego, CA).
Figure 3Comparison of Wild and mutant protein structure of Mce1A. Superimposed structure of wild (orange) and Pro359Ser mutant (blue) of Mce1A protein showing a change in helix to loop conformation after energy minimization of protein structures, as described in methods section. The RMSD between native and mutant protein was 3.07Ǻ. Pro359 (green) in wild protein and Ser359 (pink) in the mutant protein are represented in ball and stick.
Figure 4HB plot representation of wild and mutant Mce1A protein. HB plot of wild (A) and Pro359Ser mutant (B) Mce1A protein. Break in the diagonal at position 359 in the HB plot of Pro359Ser indicates loss of hydrogen bond after mutation. Conformational changes in other regions could be attributed to the alteration of hydrogen bonds in these regions. Colours of the dots in the HB plot indicated the type of hydrogen bond interactions: side chain-side chain (blue), main chain-main chain (orange), main chain-side chain (red) and multiple hydrogen bonds between amino acid residues (pink) The figures were prepared using Discovery studio 2.5 (DS Modeling 2.5, Accelrys Inc.: San Diego, CA).
Figure 5Comparative analysis of the frequency of SNPs in the . SNPs were explored using Sequenom MassARRAY platform. DR (n = 59) and DS (n = 22) clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis were taken up for this study. The comparison between the two categories revealed that (A) mce1 and (B) mce4 operon genes were significantly more polymorphic in DS clinical isolates than DR isolates (*, p < 0.05) and (**, p < 0.01) respectively.