Abstract

Pathological infection caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis is still a major global health concern. Traditional diagnostic methods are time-consuming, less sensitive, and lack high specificity. Due to an increase in the pathogenic graph of mycobacterial infections especially in developing countries, there is an urgent requirement for a rapid, low cost, and highly sensitive diagnostic method. D29 mycobacteriophage, which is capable of infecting and killing M. tuberculosis, projects itself as a potential candidate for the development of novel diagnostic methods and phage therapy of mycobacterial infections. In our previous study, we showed that the cell wall binding domain [C-terminal domain (CTD)] located at the C-terminal end of the D29 mycobacteriophage LysA endolysin very selectively binds to the peptidoglycan (PG) of Mycobacterium smegmatis and M. tuberculosis. Here, by using M. smegmatis as model organism and by exploiting the PG binding ability of CTD, we have developed a method to isolate M. smegmatis cells from a mixed culture via magnetic separation. We show that green fluorescent protein (GFP)-tagged CTD (CTD-GFP) can bind to M. smegmatis cells in vitro after treatment with non-ionic detergent Triton X-100. Fluorescence-based assays show that CTD-GFP binding to M. smegmatis cells is highly specific and stable, and is not disrupted by an excess of either GFP or BSA. We further fused CTD with glutathione-S-transferase (GST) to generate CTD-GST protein and carried out an anti-GST antibody-mediated coating of CTD-GST on Dynabeads. This allowed us to perform successful magnetic separation of M. smegmatis from a mixed culture of bacteria having both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacteria. Furthermore, the separated cells could be confirmed by a simple PCR. Thus our assay allows us to separate and identify M. smegmatis from a mixed culture.

Highlights

  • Despite tremendous advancement in medical and clinical biology, mycobacterial infections remain one of the major global health concerns

  • We have previously shown that D29 LysA is a multidomain structure having an N-terminal catalytic domain (NTD), lysozyme like domain (LD), and a C-terminal domain (CTD) that binds to the mycobacterial cell wall PG (Pohane et al, 2014)

  • We have previously shown that Cterminal domain (CTD) protein has specific PG binding property for mycobacterial PG (Pohane et al, 2014), which is one of the major components of the mycobacterial cell envelope

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Summary

Introduction

Despite tremendous advancement in medical and clinical biology, mycobacterial infections remain one of the major global health concerns. Non-availability of efficient, rapid, and reliable detection methods for TB is one of the major contributors to this high death index. There are very few approved diagnostic tools available including molecular tests, smear microscopy, and culture-based tests (Liu et al, 2007; Lange and Mori, 2010). Many of these methods for mycobacterial detection fail to satisfy parameters such as accuracy, sensitivity, and reproducibility, and high throughput techniques require special expertise (De Cock et al, 2013)

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