Abstract

Majority of the cells in the bacterial populations exposed to lethal concentrations of antibiotics for prolonged duration succumbs to the antibiotics’ sterilizing activity. The remaining cells survive by diverse mechanisms that include reduced permeability of the antibiotics. However, in the cells surviving in the continued presence of lethal concentrations of antibiotics, it is not known whether any cell surface alterations occur that in turn may reduce permeability of the antibiotics. Here we report the presence of a highly negatively charged, hydrophilic, thickened capsular outer layer (TCOL) on a small proportion of the rifampicin surviving population (RSP) of Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) cells upon prolonged continuous exposure to bactericidal concentrations of rifampicin in vitro. The TCOL reduced the intracellular entry of 5-carboxyfluorescein-rifampicin (5-FAM-rifampicin), a fluorochrome-conjugated rifampicin permeability probe of negligible bacteriocidal activity but comparable properties. Gentle mechanical removal of the TCOL enabled significant increase in the 5-FAM-rifampicin permeability. Zeta potential measurements of the cells’ surface charge and hexadecane assay for cell surface hydrophobicity showed that the TCOL imparted high negative charge and polar nature to the cells’ surface. Flow cytometry using the MLP and RSP cells, stained with calcofluor white, which specifically binds glucose/mannose units in β (1 → 4) or β (1 → 3) linkages, revealed the presence of lower content of polysaccharides containing such residues in the TCOL. GC-MS analyses of the TCOL and the normal capsular outer layer (NCOL) of MLP cells showed elevated levels of α-D-glucopyranoside, mannose, arabinose, galactose, and their derivatives in the TCOL, indicating the presence of high content of polysaccharides with these residues. We hypothesize that the significantly high thickness and the elevated negative charge of the TCOL might have functioned as a physical barrier restricting the permeability of the relatively non-polar rifampicin. This might have reduced intracellular rifampicin concentration enabling the cells’ survival in the continued presence of high doses of rifampicin. In the context of our earlier report on the de novo emergence of rifampicin-resistant genetic mutants of Mtb from the population surviving under lethal doses of the antibiotic, the present findings attain clinical significance if a subpopulation of the tubercle bacilli in tuberculosis patients possesses TCOL.

Highlights

  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the pathogenic bacterium that causes tuberculosis, possesses remarkable structural and functional features that enable their survival under various stress conditions, including lethal concentrations of antibiotics

  • The present study showed that the Mtb cells in the rifampicin surviving population possessed a thickened capsular outer layer (TCOL) with an increased content of negatively charged polysaccharides that conferred high negative charge on the cell surface

  • We recently found that the non-replicating persistent (NRP) stage 2 Mtb H37Ra cells in Wayne’s in vitro hypoxia model of dormancy possessed thickened capsular outer layer, which was lost upon shifting of the NRP stage 2 cells from hypoxia to normoxia was (Jakkala and Ajitkumar, 2019)

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Summary

Introduction

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), the pathogenic bacterium that causes tuberculosis, possesses remarkable structural and functional features that enable their survival under various stress conditions, including lethal concentrations of antibiotics One of such features, the uniquely structured cell wall (Daffe, 2015; Jankute et al, 2015), is believed to contribute to the refractoriness of the bacilli toward many antibiotics. The complex structure of the cell wall of Mtb is believed to restrict its permeability toward several host-derived antimicrobial biomolecules, thereby enabling the survival of the bacilli in its diverse habitats (Lederer et al, 1975; Jarlier and Nikaido, 1994; Cook et al, 2009; Nguyen, 2016). Restricted membrane permeability has been found to contribute to rifampicin resistance in actively growing mycobacteria as well (Hui et al, 1977)

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