Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis possesses an unusually large representation of type II toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems, whose functions and targets are mostly unknown. To better understand the basis of their unique expansion and to probe putative functional similarities among these systems, here we computationally and experimentally investigated their sequence relationships. Bioinformatic and phylogenetic investigations revealed that 51 sequences of the VapBC toxin family group into paralogous sub-clusters. On the basis of conserved sequence fingerprints within paralogues, we predicted functional residues and residues at the putative TA interface that are useful to evaluate TA interactions. Substitution of these likely functional residues abolished the toxin's growth-inhibitory activity. Furthermore, conducting similarity searches in 101 mycobacterial and ∼4500 other prokaryotic genomes, we assessed the relative conservation of the M. tuberculosis TA systems and found that most TA orthologues are well-conserved among the members of the M. tuberculosis complex, which cause tuberculosis in animal hosts. We found that soil-inhabiting, free-living Actinobacteria also harbor as many as 12 TA pairs. Finally, we identified five novel putative TA modules in M. tuberculosis. For one of them, we demonstrate that overexpression of the putative toxin, Rv2514c, induces bacteriostasis and that co-expression of the cognate antitoxin Rv2515c restores bacterial growth. Taken together, our findings reveal that toxin sequences are more closely related than antitoxin sequences in M. tuberculosis Furthermore, the identification of additional TA systems reported here expands the known repertoire of TA systems in M. tuberculosis.

Highlights

  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis possesses an unusually large representation of type II toxin–antitoxin (TA) systems, whose functions and targets are mostly unknown

  • Conducting similarity searches in 101 mycobacterial and ϳ4500 other prokaryotic genomes, we assessed the relative conservation of the M. tuberculosis Toxin– antitoxin systems (TAs) systems and found that most TA orthologues are well-conserved among the members of the M. tuberculosis complex, which cause tuberculosis in animal hosts

  • We have provided a comprehensive inventory of several putative TA pairs, orphan toxin, or antitoxin homologues of the M. tuberculosis type II TA in all mycobacteria (Tables S5 and S8)

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Summary

Introduction

Mycobacterium tuberculosis possesses an unusually large representation of type II toxin–antitoxin (TA) systems, whose functions and targets are mostly unknown. Recipient of DBT Fellowship Grant BT/PR5510/MED/29/513/2012. Recipient of DST Fellowship Grant EMR/2015/000426. Type II toxin systems are associated with a broad array of targets and affect central dogma reactions These include inhibition of DNA gyrase, ribosomes, and elongation factors or acting as ribonucleases [11,12,13]. The TA systems with the PIN domain (originally identified in the N terminus of PilT), known as VapBC (virulenceassociated proteins [12, 21,22,23]), constitute the largest family with 51 members Targets of these toxins include mRNA, tRNA, and rRNA (24 –27). Our findings may stimulate more detailed experimental characterization of these novel systems and expand the understanding of this complex machinery

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