4.8 Article

Imaging mycobacterial growth and division with a fluorogenic probe

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1720996115

Keywords

tuberculosis; cell wall; lipid; mycolic acid; Ag85

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [BIR-9512577]
  2. NIH [S10RR13790, P50 GM64598, R33 DK070297]
  3. NSF [DBI-0520825, DBI-9977525]
  4. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases [R01-AI126592]
  5. National Institutes of General Medical Sciences [F32GM113454, F31 GM 108408]
  6. Chemistry-Biology Interface Training Program [T32-GM008505]
  7. Human Frontiers Science Program [RGY0076/2013]

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Control and manipulation of bacterial populations requires an understanding of the factors that govern growth, division, and antibiotic action. Fluorescent and chemically reactive small molecule probes of cell envelope components can visualize these processes and advance our knowledge of cell envelope biosynthesis (e.g., peptidoglycan production). Still, fundamental gaps remain in our understanding of the spatial and temporal dynamics of cell envelope assembly. Previously described reporters require steps that limit their use to static imaging. Probes that can be used for real-time imaging would advance our understanding of cell envelope construction. To this end, we synthesized a fluorogenic probe that enables continuous live cell imaging in mycobacteria and related genera. This probe reports on the mycolyltransferases that assemble the mycolic acid membrane. This peptidoglycan-anchored bilayer-like assembly functions to protect these cells from antibiotics and host defenses. Our probe, quencher-trehalose-fluorophore (QTF), is an analog of the natural mycolyltransferase substrate. Mycolyltrans-ferases process QTF by diverting their normal transesterification activity to hydrolysis, a process that unleashes fluorescence. QTF enables high contrast continuous imaging and the visualization of mycolyltransferase activity in cells. QTF revealed that mycolyltransferase activity is augmented before cell division and localized to the septa and cell poles, especially at the old pole. This observed localization suggests that mycolyltransferases are components of extracellular cell envelope assemblies, in analogy to the intracellular divisomes and polar elongation complexes. We anticipate QTF can be exploited to detect and monitor mycobacteria in physiologically relevant environments.

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