Clinically Relevant Mutations of Mycobacterial GatCAB Inform Regulation of Translational Fidelity
Yangyang Li, Rong-Jun Cai, Jiaying Yang, Tamara L. Hendrickson, Ye Xiang, Babak Javid
Abstract
, despite the fact that the indirect pathway consumes more energy and is error prone. We have previously shown that the higher protein synthesis errors from this indirect pathway in mycobacteria allow adaptation to hostile environments such as antibiotic treatment through generation of novel alternate proteins not coded by the genome. However, the precise mechanisms of how translational fidelity is tuned were not known. Here, we biochemically and biophysically characterize the critical enzyme of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis indirect pathway, GatCAB, as well as two mutant enzymes previously identified from clinical isolates that were associated with increased mistranslation. We show that the mutants dysregulate the pathway via destabilizing the enzyme complex. Importantly, increasing stability improves translational fidelity in both wild-type and mutant bacteria, demonstrating a mechanism by which mycobacteria may tune mistranslation rates.