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Characterization of phosphofructokinase activity in Mycobacterium tuberculosis reveals that a functional glycolytic carbon flow is necessary to limit the accumulation of toxic metabolic intermediates under hypoxia
- Source :
- PLoS ONE, Vol 8, Iss 2, p e56037 (2013), PLoS ONE
- Publication Year :
- 2013
- Publisher :
- Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2013.
-
Abstract
- Metabolic versatility has been increasingly recognized as a major virulence mechanism that enables Mycobacterium tuberculosis to persist in many microenvironments encountered in its host. Glucose is one of the most abundant carbon sources that is exploited by many pathogenic bacteria in the human host. M. tuberculosis has an intact glycolytic pathway that is highly conserved in all clinical isolates sequenced to date suggesting that glucose may represent a non-negligible source of carbon and energy for this pathogen in vivo. Fructose-6-phosphate phosphorylation represents the key-committing step in glycolysis and is catalyzed by a phosphofructokinase (PFK) activity. Two genes, pfkA and pfkB have been annotated to encode putative PFK in M. tuberculosis. Here, we show that PFKA is the sole PFK enzyme in M. tuberculosis with no functional redundancy with PFKB. PFKA is required for growth on glucose as sole carbon source. In co-metabolism experiments, we report that disruption of the glycolytic pathway at the PFK step results in intracellular accumulation of sugar-phosphates that correlated with significant impairment of the cell viability. Concomitantly, we found that the presence of glucose is highly toxic for the long-term survival of hypoxic non-replicating mycobacteria, suggesting that accumulation of glucose-derived toxic metabolites does occur in the absence of sustained aerobic respiration. The culture medium traditionally used to study the physiology of hypoxic mycobacteria is supplemented with glucose. In this medium, M. tuberculosis can survive for only 7-10 days in a true non-replicating state before death is observed. By omitting glucose in the medium this period could be extended for up to at least 40 days without significant viability loss. Therefore, our study suggests that glycolysis leads to accumulation of glucose-derived toxic metabolites that limits long-term survival of hypoxic mycobacteria. Such toxic effect is exacerbated when the glycolytic pathway is disrupted at the PKF step.
- Subjects :
- Bacterial Diseases
Glycobiology
lcsh:Medicine
Biochemistry
Gene Knockout Techniques
Mice
chemistry.chemical_compound
Gene Order
Glycolysis
Hypoxia
lcsh:Science
Multidisciplinary
Virulence
biology
Fructosephosphates
Enzymes
Bacterial Pathogens
Host-Pathogen Interaction
Infectious Diseases
Phenotype
Medicine
Female
Research Article
Phosphofructokinase
Cellular respiration
Carbohydrate metabolism
Microbiology
Mycobacterium
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Enzyme activator
Tuberculosis
Animals
Humans
Biology
Microbial Pathogens
Microbial Metabolism
lcsh:R
biology.organism_classification
Carbon
Phosphofructokinase activity
Enzyme Activation
Disease Models, Animal
Kinetics
Glucose
Phosphofructokinases
chemistry
Mutation
lcsh:Q
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 19326203
- Volume :
- 8
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- PLoS ONE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....28ab9387445e1fbde94ac046791d4169