4.8 Article

MadR mediates acyl CoA-dependent regulation of mycolic acid desaturation in mycobacteria

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2111059119

关键词

Mycobacterium; tuberculosis; mycolic acid; TetR regulator; cell envelope

资金

  1. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases of the National Institutes of Health [R01AI141953, R01AI128215, U19AI135976]
  2. BBSRC [BB/N01314X/1]
  3. Midlands Integrative Biosciences Training Partnership (MIBTP) [BB/M01116X/1]
  4. BBSRC [BB/N01314X/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study reveals that the mycolic acid desaturase regulator (MadR) controls mycolic acid desaturation and biosynthesis in response to cell envelope stress. This unique regulation mechanism is distinct to other regulators and MadR acts as a key regulatory checkpoint during infection to coordinate mycolic acid remodeling.
Mycobacterium tuberculosis has a lipid-rich cell envelope that is remodeled throughout infection to enable adaptation within the host. Few transcriptional regulators have been characterized that coordinate synthesis of mycolic acids, the major cell wall lipids of mycobacteria. Here, we show that the mycolic acid desaturase regulator (MadR), a transcriptional repressor of the mycolate desaturase genes desA1 and desA2, controls mycolic acid desaturation and biosynthesis in response to cell envelope stress. A madR-null mutant of M. smegmatis exhibited traits of an impaired cell wall with an altered outer mycomembrane, accumulation of a desaturated alpha-mycolate, susceptibility to antimycobacterials, and cell surface disruption. Transcriptomic profiling showed that enriched lipid metabolism genes that were significantly down-regulated upon madR deletion included acyl-coenzyme A (aceyl-CoA) dehydrogenases, implicating it in the indirect control of beta-oxidation pathways. Electromobility shift assays and binding affinities suggest a unique acyl-CoA pool-sensing mechanism, whereby MadR is able to bind a range of acyl-CoAs, including those with unsaturated as well as saturated acyl chains. MadR repression of desA1/ desA2 is relieved upon binding of saturated acyl-CoAs of chain length C16 to C24, while no impact is observed upon binding of shorter chain and unsaturated acyl-CoAs. We propose this mechanism of regulation as distinct to other mycolic acid and fatty acid synthesis regulators and place MadR as the key regulatory checkpoint that coordinates mycolic acid remodeling during infection in response to host-derived cell surface perturbation.

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