Although mycobacteria are known to accumulate polyphosphate (PolyP), a linear polymer of orthophosphate, when subjected to stresses, the exact roles of this molecule are not yet clearly understood. We found that deletion of the pstA gene encoding for a transmembrane domain of the high-affinity phosphate-specific ABC transporter system (Pst system) resulted in accumulation of high amounts of PolyP during growth in phosphate (Pi)-replete conditions in Mycobacterium tuberculosis and Mycobacterium smegmatis. These PolyP stores were gradually used during Pi starvation by the ApstA mutants in order to sustain growth and this allowed the mutant strains to reach a higher cell density than the wild-type (WT) parental strain. Neither the mRNA nor the protein levels of polyphosphate kinase 1 (PPK1) could explain the PolyP accumulation observed in the mutant, suggesting that another regulatory mechanism is involved. The ApstA mutant of M. smegmatis was hypersensitive to several in vitro stresses, including detergent, oxidative stress, and cell wall targeting antibiotics. Deletion of the main enzyme involved in PolyP synthesis, PPK1, in the ApstA mutant background of M. smegmatis completely reversed the PolyP accumulation and partially reversed the stress sensitivity as well as the derepression of PHO regulon genes observed in the ApstA mutant. The mechanism of PolyP accumulation in M. smegmatis was investigated using a genetic approach. We found that this mechanism differs from the (p)ppGpp-mediated PolyP accumulation observed in Escherichia coli, since deletion of the RelA enzyme in a ApstA mutant background did not prevent PolyP accumulation. The mechanism of PolyP degradation during Pi starvation in the M. smegmatis ApstA mutant was also analyzed. Deletion of both polyphosphatase enzymes (PPX1 and PPX2) as well as the polyphosphate kinase 2 (PPK2) enzyme did not have any impact on PolyP degradation. PPK1 is a bifunctional enzyme that can either synthesize or degrade PolyP. Our current hypothesis is that PPK1 might perform the reverse reaction (PolyP degradation) during Pi starvation. The aim of the second part of my project was to make a comparative study of the expression and regulation of the phosphate specific transporter (pst) operon in fast-growing [M. smegmatis] and slow-growing [M. tuberculosis] mycobacteria. To achieve this goal, pst reporter strains of M. smegmatis and M. tuberculosis were constructed by precise insertion of a modified dest_gfp gene (provided by Giulia Manina) encoding a destabilized green fluorescent protein (dest_GFP) into the corresponding pst locus as transcriptional ) fusions. The transcriptional reporter construct [p) was introduced in both the WT and the ApstA mutant backgrounds. The kinetics of induction of the pst-gfp reporters in WT and ApstA mutant strains in response to Pi starvation was analyzed. Population-averaged measurements were made using qRT-PCR and Western blotting. Single-cell measurements using flow cytomet
Pierre Vandergheynst, Felix Naef, Cédric Gobet, Francesco Craighero, Mohan Vamsi Nallapareddy
Francesco Carrara, Jiande Zhou