Litcius/Paper detail

Phosphoenolpyruvate depletion mediates both growth arrest and drug tolerance of <i>Mycobacterium tuberculosis</i> in hypoxia

Ju‐Hyeon Lim, Jae Jin Lee, Sun-Kyoung Lee, Seoyong Kim, Seok‐Yong Eum, Hyungjin Eoh

2021Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences47 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

(Mtb) infection is difficult to treat because Mtb spends the majority of its life cycle in a nonreplicating (NR) state. Since NR Mtb is highly tolerant to antibiotic effects and can mutate to become drug resistant (DR), our conventional tuberculosis (TB) treatment is not effective. Thus, a novel strategy to kill NR Mtb is required. Accumulating evidence has shown that repetitive exposure to sublethal doses of antibiotics enhances the level of drug tolerance, implying that NR Mtb is formed by adaptive metabolic remodeling. As such, metabolic modulation strategies to block the metabolic remodeling needed to form NR Mtb have emerged as new therapeutic options. Here, we modeled in vitro NR Mtb using hypoxia, applied isotope metabolomics, and revealed that phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) is nearly completely depleted in NR Mtb. This near loss of PEP reduces PEP-carbon flux toward multiple pathways essential for replication and drug sensitivity. Inversely, supplementing with PEP restored the carbon flux and the activities of the foregoing pathways, resulting in growth and heightened drug susceptibility of NR Mtb, which ultimately prevented the development of DR. Taken together, PEP depletion in NR Mtb is associated with the acquisition of drug tolerance and subsequent emergence of DR, demonstrating that PEP treatment is a possible metabolic modulation strategy to resensitize NR Mtb to conventional TB treatment and prevent the emergence of DR.

Topics & Concepts

Mycobacterium tuberculosisHypoxia (environmental)MicrobiologyTuberculosisDrugBiologyChemistryMedicinePharmacologyOxygenPathologyOrganic chemistryTuberculosis Research and EpidemiologyPneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia detection and treatmentRespiratory Support and Mechanisms