학술논문

Unraveling novel roles of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis transcription factor Rv0081 in regulation of the nucleoid‐associated proteins Lsr2 and EspR, cholesterol utilization, and subversion of lysosomal trafficking in macrophages.
Document Type
Article
Source
Molecular Microbiology. May2022, Vol. 117 Issue 5, p1104-1120. 17p.
Subject
*MYCOBACTERIUM tuberculosis
*LYSOSOMES
*TRANSCRIPTION factors
*CHOLESTEROL
*REGULATOR genes
*GENE regulatory networks
*OPERONS
Language
ISSN
0950-382X
Abstract
The transcriptional network of Mycobacterium tuberculosis is designed to enable the organism to withstand host‐associated stresses and to exploit the host milieu for its own survival and multiplication. Rv0081 (MT0088) is a transcriptional regulator whose interplay with other gene regulatory proteins and role in enabling M. tuberculosis to thrive within its host is incompletely understood. M. tuberculosis utilizes cholesterol within the granuloma. We show that deletion of Rv0081 compromises the ability of M. tuberculosis to utilize cholesterol as the sole carbon source, to subvert lysosomal trafficking, and to form granulomas in vitro. Rv0081 downregulates expression of the nucleoid‐associated repressor Lsr2, leading to increased expression of the cholesterol catabolism‐linked gene kshA and genes of the cholesterol importing operon, accounting for the requirement of Rv0081 in cholesterol utilization. Furthermore, Rv0081 activates EspR which is required for secretion of ESX‐1 substrates, which in turn are involved in subversion of lysosomal trafficking of M. tuberculosis and granuloma expansion. These results provide new insight into the role of Rv0081 under conditions which resemble the environment encountered by M. tuberculosis within its host. Rv0081 emerges as a central regulator of genes linked to various pathways which are crucial for the survival of the bacterium in vivo. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]