Abstract

Pathogenic species of mycobacteria are known to use the host cholesterol during lung infection as an alternative source of carbon and energy. Mycobacteria culture in minimal medium (MM) has been used as an in vitro experimental model to study the consumption of exogenous cholesterol. Once in MM, different species of mycobacteria start to consume the cholesterol and initiate transcriptional and metabolic adaptations, upregulating the enzymes of the methylcitrate cycle (MCC) and accumulating a variety of primary metabolites that are known to be important substrates for cell wall biosynthesis. We hypothesized that stressful pressure of cultures in MM is able to induce critical adaptation for the bacteria which win the infection. To identify important modifications in the biosynthesis of the cell wall, we cultured the fast-growing and nonpathogenic Mycobacterium smegmatis in MM supplemented with or without glycerol and/or cholesterol. Different from the culture in complete medium Middlebrook 7H9 broth, the bacteria when cultured in MM decreased growth and changed in the accumulation of cell wall molecules. However, the supplementation of MM with glycerol and/or cholesterol recovered the accumulation of phosphatidylinositol mannosides (PIMs) and other phospholipids but maintained growth deceleration. The biosynthesis of lipomannan (LM) and of lipoarabinomannan (LAM) was significantly modulated after culture in MM, independently of glycerol and/or cholesterol supplementation, where LM size was decreased (LM13-25KDa) and LAM increased (LAM37-100KDa), when compared these molecules after bacteria culture in complete medium (LM17-25KDa and LAM37-50KDa). These changes modified the cell surface hydrophobicity and susceptibility against H2O2. The infection of J774 macrophages with M. smegmatis, after culture in MM, induced the formation of granuloma-like structures, while supplementation with cholesterol induced the highest rate of formation of these structures. Taken together, our results identify critical changes in mycobacterial cell wall molecules after culture in MM that induces cholesterol accumulation, helping the mycobacteria to increase their capacity to form granuloma-like structures.

Highlights

  • Different species of mycobacteria are known to grow in a cholesterol-rich microenvironment to use the side chain of cholesterol to provide energy and carbon [1,2,3,4,5]

  • To investigate the ability of mycobacteria to grow in MM and to induce the use of cholesterol, we first compared the growth rate of M. smegmatis in complete medium Middlebrook 7H9 broth, which is normally supplemented with glycerol, with cultures in MM, with or without glycerol and/or cholesterol supplementation

  • Nutrient depletion resulted in the slow growth of mycobacteria; glycerol supplementation, with or without cholesterol (MM+Gly and MM was supplemented only with glycerol (MM+Gly)+Chol groups), was sufficient for cells cultured in Middlebrook 7H9 broth to achieve an optical density at 600 nm (O.D.600; 7H9+Gly group with O.D.600 of 1.04 - 1.11 at stationary phase) equivalent to that observed under usual mycobacterial culture conditions (Figure 1(a))

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Summary

Introduction

Different species of mycobacteria are known to grow in a cholesterol-rich microenvironment to use the side chain of cholesterol to provide energy and carbon [1,2,3,4,5]. The mycobacteria are induced to start transcriptional and metabolic adaptations, in turn, upregulating the enzymes of the methylcitrate cycle (MCC). These organisms accumulate a variety of primary metabolites that are known to be important substrates for cell wall biosynthesis, including methylsuccinate, 2-methylcitrate, mannose, mannose-1-phosphate, and trehalose 6-phosphate [8]. These data suggest that catabolism of cholesterol is a result of nutritional stress and may require the bacilli to make transcriptional and metabolic adaptations during intracellular growth. These adaptations may change many physiological conditions, especially pathways that are required to keep the bacilli alive

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