4.6 Review

Applications of Transcriptomics and Proteomics for Understanding Dormancy and Resuscitation in Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2021.642487

Keywords

dormancy; resuscitation; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; transcriptomics; proteomics

Categories

Funding

  1. J. C. Bose Fellowship [SB/S2/JCB-049/2016]
  2. Council for Scientific and Industrial Research, Emeritus Scientist Scheme [21(1088)/19/EMR-II]

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Mycobacterium tuberculosis can survive in its host for extended periods, remaining dormant within granulomas. Understanding the mechanisms of entry into and exit from dormancy is crucial for developing new tuberculosis treatment strategies. Transcriptomic and proteomic approaches have revealed key genes and pathways involved in dormancy and reactivation of M. tuberculosis.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis can survive within its host for extended periods of time without any clinical symptoms of disease and reactivate when the immune system is weakened. A detailed understanding of how M. tuberculosis enters into and exits out of dormancy, is necessary in order to develop new strategies for tackling tuberculosis. Omics methodologies are unsupervised and unbiased to any hypothesis, making them useful tools for the discovery of new drug targets. This review summarizes the findings of transcriptomic and proteomic approaches toward understanding dormancy and reactivation of M. tuberculosis. Within the granuloma of latently infected individuals, the bacteria are dormant, with a marked slowdown of growth, division and metabolism. In vitro models have attempted to simulate these features by subjecting the bacterium to hypoxia, nutrient starvation, potassium depletion, growth in the presence of vitamin C, or growth in the presence of long-chain fatty acids. The striking feature of all the models is the upregulation of the DosR regulon, which includes the transcriptional regulator Rv0081, one of the central hubs of dormancy. Also upregulated are chaperone proteins, fatty acid and cholesterol degrading enzymes, the sigma factors SigE and SigB, enzymes of the glyoxylate and the methylcitrate cycle, the Clp proteases and the transcriptional regulator ClgR. Further, there is increased expression of genes involved in mycobactin synthesis, fatty acid degradation, the glyoxylate shunt and gluconeogenesis, in granulomas formed in vitro from peripheral blood mononuclear cells from latently infected individuals compared to naive individuals. Genes linked to aerobic respiration, replication, transcription, translation and cell division, are downregulated during dormancy in vitro, but upregulated during reactivation. Resuscitation in vitro is associated with upregulation of genes linked to the synthesis of mycolic acids, phthiocerol mycocerosate (PDIM) and sulfolipids; ribosome biosynthesis, replication, transcription and translation, cell division, and genes encoding the five resuscitation promoting factors (Rpfs). The expression of proteases, transposases and insertion sequences, suggests genome reorganization during reactivation.

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