Temporal genome-wide fitness analysis of Mycobacterium marinum during infection reveals the genetic requirement for virulence and survival in amoebae and microglial cells.
Louise H LefrançoisJahn NitschkeHuihai WuGaёl PanisJulien PradosRachel E ButlerTom A MendumNabil HannaGraham R StewartThierry SoldatiPublished in: mSystems (2024)
Tuberculosis remains the most pervasive infectious disease and the recent emergence of drug-resistant strains emphasizes the need for more efficient drug treatments. A key feature of pathogenesis, conserved between the human pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis and the model pathogen Mycobacterium marinum, is the metabolic switch to lipid catabolism and altered expression of virulence genes at different stages of infection. This study aims to identify genes involved in sustaining viable intracellular infection. We applied transposon sequencing (Tn-Seq) to M. marinum , an unbiased genome-wide strategy combining saturation insertional mutagenesis and high-throughput sequencing. This approach allowed us to identify the localization and relative abundance of insertions in pools of transposon mutants. Gene essentiality and fitness cost of mutations were quantitatively compared between in vitro growth and different stages of infection in two evolutionary distinct phagocytes, the amoeba Dictyostelium discoideum and the murine BV2 microglial cells. In the M. marinum genome, 57% of TA sites were disrupted and 568 genes (10.2%) were essential, which is comparable to previous Tn-Seq studies on M. tuberculosis and M. bovis . Major pathways involved in the survival of M. marinum during infection of D. discoideum are related to DNA damage repair, lipid and vitamin metabolism, the type VII secretion system (T7SS) ESX-1, and the Mce1 lipid transport system. These pathways, except Mce1 and some glycolytic enzymes, were similarly affected in BV2 cells. These differences suggest subtly distinct nutrient availability or requirement in different host cells despite the known predominant use of lipids in both amoeba and microglial cells.IMPORTANCEThe emergence of biochemically and genetically tractable host model organisms for infection studies holds the promise to accelerate the pace of discoveries related to the evolution of innate immunity and the dissection of conserved mechanisms of cell-autonomous defenses. Here, we have used the genetically and biochemically tractable infection model system Dictyostelium discoideum / Mycobacterium marinum to apply a genome-wide transposon-sequencing experimental strategy to reveal comprehensively which mutations confer a fitness advantage or disadvantage during infection and compare these to a similar experiment performed using the murine microglial BV2 cells as host for M. marinum to identify conservation of virulence pathways between hosts.
Keyphrases
- genome wide
- mycobacterium tuberculosis
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- drug resistant
- dna methylation
- dna damage
- lps induced
- single cell
- escherichia coli
- lipopolysaccharide induced
- stem cells
- inflammatory response
- copy number
- staphylococcus aureus
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- gene expression
- signaling pathway
- physical activity
- neuropathic pain
- high throughput sequencing
- poor prognosis
- spinal cord injury
- endothelial cells
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cell death
- mesenchymal stem cells
- rna seq
- cell therapy
- biofilm formation
- microbial community
- drug induced
- acinetobacter baumannii
- hiv aids
- hepatitis c virus
- case control