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Common Variants in the Glycerol Kinase Gene Reduce Tuberculosis Drug Efficacy

Authors
 Michelle M Bellerose  ;  Seung-Hun Baek  ;  Chuan-Chin Huang  ;  Caitlin E Moss  ;  Eun-Ik Koh  ;  Megan K Proulx  ;  Clare M Smith  ;  Richard E Baker  ;  Jong Seok Lee  ;  Seokyong Eum  ;  Sung Jae Shin  ;  Sang-Nae Cho  ;  Megan Murray  ;  Christopher M Sassetti 
Citation
 MBIO, Vol.10(4) : e00663-19, 2019-07 
Journal Title
MBIO
Issue Date
2019-07
MeSH
Antitubercular Agents / pharmacology* ; Drug Resistance, Multiple, Bacterial / genetics ; Glycerol Kinase / genetics* ; Microbial Sensitivity Tests ; Mycobacterium tuberculosis / drug effects ; Mycobacterium tuberculosis / genetics*
Keywords
Mycobacterium tuberculosis ; antibiotic resistance ; genetics
Abstract
Despite the administration of multiple drugs that are highly effective in vitro, tuberculosis (TB) treatment requires prolonged drug administration and is confounded by the emergence of drug-resistant strains. To understand the mechanisms that limit antibiotic efficacy, we performed a comprehensive genetic study to identify Mycobacterium tuberculosis genes that alter the rate of bacterial clearance in drug-treated mice. Several functionally distinct bacterial genes were found to alter bacterial clearance, and prominent among these was the glpK gene that encodes the glycerol-3-kinase enzyme that is necessary for glycerol catabolism. Growth on glycerol generally increased the sensitivity of M. tuberculosis to antibiotics in vitro, and glpK-deficient bacteria persisted during antibiotic treatment in vivo, particularly during exposure to pyrazinamide-containing regimens. Frameshift mutations in a hypervariable homopolymeric region of the glpK gene were found to be a specific marker of multidrug resistance in clinical M. tuberculosis isolates, and these loss-of-function alleles were also enriched in extensively drug-resistant clones. These data indicate that frequently observed variation in the glpK coding sequence produces a drug-tolerant phenotype that can reduce antibiotic efficacy and may contribute to the evolution of resistance. IMPORTANCE TB control is limited in part by the length of antibiotic treatment needed to prevent recurrent disease. To probe mechanisms underlying survival under antibiotic pressure, we performed a genetic screen for M. tuberculosis mutants with altered susceptibility to treatment using the mouse model of TB. We identified multiple genes involved in a range of functions which alter sensitivity to antibiotics. In particular, we found glycerol catabolism mutants were less susceptible to treatment and that common variation in a homopolymeric region in the glpK gene was associated with drug resistance in clinical isolates. These studies indicate that reversible high-frequency variation in carbon metabolic pathways can produce phenotypically drug-tolerant clones and have a role in the development of resistance.
Files in This Item:
T9992019193.pdf Download
DOI
10.1128/mBio.00663-19
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Microbiology (미생물학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Shin, Sung Jae(신성재) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0854-4582
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/189195
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