| Literature DB >> 31488707 |
Hassan Safi1,2, Pooja Gopal3, Subramanya Lingaraju4,2, Shuyi Ma5, Carly Levine4,2, Veronique Dartois6,7, Michelle Yee8, Liping Li6,7, Landry Blanc6, Hsin-Pin Ho Liang6,7, Seema Husain9, Mainul Hoque9, Patricia Soteropoulos9, Tige Rustad5, David R Sherman5, Thomas Dick7, David Alland1,2.
Abstract
The length and complexity of tuberculosis (TB) therapy, as well as the propensity of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to develop drug resistance, are major barriers to global TB control efforts. M. tuberculosis is known to have the ability to enter into a drug-tolerant state, which may explain many of these impediments to TB treatment. We have identified a mechanism of genetically encoded but rapidly reversible drug tolerance in M. tuberculosis caused by transient frameshift mutations in a homopolymeric tract (HT) of 7 cytosines (7C) in the glpK gene. Inactivating frameshift mutations associated with the 7C HT in glpK produce small colonies that exhibit heritable multidrug increases in minimal inhibitory concentrations and decreases in drug-dependent killing; however, reversion back to a fully drug-susceptible large-colony phenotype occurs rapidly through the introduction of additional insertions or deletions in the same glpK HT region. These reversible frameshift mutations in the 7C HT of M. tuberculosis glpK occur in clinical isolates, accumulate in M. tuberculosis-infected mice with further accumulation during drug treatment, and exhibit a reversible transcriptional profile including induction of dosR and sigH and repression of kstR regulons, similar to that observed in other in vitro models of M. tuberculosis tolerance. These results suggest that GlpK phase variation may contribute to drug tolerance, treatment failure, and relapse in human TB. Drugs effective against phase-variant M. tuberculosis may hasten TB treatment and improve cure rates.Entities:
Keywords: Mycobacterium tuberculosis; glpK; phase variation; reversible drug tolerance; small colony variant
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31488707 PMCID: PMC6765255 DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1907631116
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ISSN: 0027-8424 Impact factor: 11.205