igr Genes and Mycobacterium tuberculosis Cholesterol Metabolism

JC Chang, MD Miner, AK Pandey, WP Gill… - Journal of …, 2009 - Am Soc Microbiol
JC Chang, MD Miner, AK Pandey, WP Gill, NS Harik, CM Sassetti, DR Sherman
Journal of bacteriology, 2009Am Soc Microbiol
Recently, cholesterol was identified as a physiologically important nutrient for
Mycobacterium tuberculosis survival in chronically infected mice. However, it remained
unclear precisely when cholesterol is available to the bacterium and what additional
bacterial functions are required for its metabolism. Here, we show that the igr locus, which
we previously found to be essential for intracellular growth and virulence of M. tuberculosis,
is required for cholesterol metabolism. While igr-deficient strains grow identically to the wild …
Abstract
Recently, cholesterol was identified as a physiologically important nutrient for Mycobacterium tuberculosis survival in chronically infected mice. However, it remained unclear precisely when cholesterol is available to the bacterium and what additional bacterial functions are required for its metabolism. Here, we show that the igr locus, which we previously found to be essential for intracellular growth and virulence of M. tuberculosis, is required for cholesterol metabolism. While igr-deficient strains grow identically to the wild type in the presence of short- and long-chain fatty acids, the growth of these bacteria is completely inhibited in the presence of cholesterol. Interestingly, this mutant is still able to respire under cholesterol-dependent growth inhibition, suggesting that the bacteria can metabolize other carbon sources during cholesterol toxicity. Consistent with this hypothesis, we found that the growth-inhibitory effect of cholesterol in vitro depends on cholesterol import, as mutation of the mce4 sterol uptake system partially suppresses this effect. In addition, the Δigr mutant growth defect during the early phase of disease is completely suppressed by mutating mce4, implicating cholesterol intoxication as the primary mechanism of attenuation. We conclude that M. tuberculosis metabolizes cholesterol throughout infection.
American Society for Microbiology