Lipidomic discovery of deoxysiderophores reveals a revised mycobactin biosynthesis pathway in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
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Author
Madigan, Cressida A.
Cheng, Tan-Yun
Layre, Emilie
Young, David C.
McConnell, Matthew J.
Debono, C. Anthony
Murry, Jeffrey P.
Wei, Jun-Rong
Barry, Clifton E. 3rd
Rodriguez, G. Marcela
Matsunaga, Isamu
Rubin, Eric J.
Moody, D. Branch
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https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1109958109Metadata
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Madigan, C. A., T.-Y. Cheng, E. Layre, D. C. Young, M. J. McConnell, C. A. Debono, J. P. Murry, et al. 2012. “Lipidomic Discovery of Deoxysiderophores Reveals a Revised Mycobactin Biosynthesis Pathway in Mycobacterium Tuberculosis.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 109 (4): 1257–62. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1109958109.Abstract
To measure molecular changes underlying pathogen adaptation, we generated a searchable dataset of more than 12,000 mass spectrometry events, corresponding to lipids and small molecules that constitute a lipidome for Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Iron is essential for M. tuberculosis survival, and the organism imports this metal using mycobactin and carboxymycobactin siderophores. Detection of an unexpected siderophore variant and deletions of genes for iron scavenging has led to a revised mycobactin biosynthesis model. An organism-wide search of the M. tuberculosis database for hypothetical compounds predicted by this model led to the discovery of two families of previously unknown lipids, designated monodeoxymycobactins and monodeoxycarboxymycobactins. These molecules suggest a revised biosynthetic model that alters the substrates and order of action of enzymes through the mycobactin biosynthetic pathway. We tested this model genetically by solving M. tuberculosis lipidomes after deletion of the iron-dependent regulator (ideR), mycobactin synthase B (mbtB), or mycobactin synthase G (mbtG). These studies show that deoxymycobactins are actively regulated during iron starvation, and also define essential roles of MbtG in converting deoxymycobactins to mycobactin and in promoting M. tuberculosis growth. Thus, lipidomics is an efficient discovery tool that informs genetic relationships, leading to a revised general model for the biosynthesis of these virulence-conferring siderophores.Terms of Use
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