Taneja, Neetu Kumra ; Dhingra, Sakshi ; Mittal, Aditya ; Naresh, Mohit ; Tyagi, Jaya Sivaswami (2010) Mycobacterium tuberculosis transcriptional adaptation, growth arrest and dormancy phenotype development is triggered by vitamin C PLoS One, 5 (5). e10860. ISSN 1932-6203
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Official URL: http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/jo...
Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0010860
Abstract
Background Tubercle bacilli are thought to persist in a dormant state during latent tuberculosis (TB) infection. Although little is known about the host factors that induce and maintain Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tb) within latent lesions, O2 depletion, nutrient limitation and acidification are some of the stresses implicated in bacterial dormancy development/growth arrest. Adaptation to hypoxia and exposure to NO/CO is implemented through the DevRS/DosT two-component system which induces the dormancy regulon. Methodology/Principal Findings Here we show that vitamin C (ascorbic acid/AA) can serve as an additional signal to induce the DevR regulon. Physiological levels of AA scavenge O2 and rapidly induce the DevR regulon at an estimated O2 saturation of <30%. The kinetics and magnitude of the response suggests an initial involvement of DosT and a sustained DevS-mediated response during bacterial adaptation to increasing hypoxia. In addition to inducing DevR regulon mechanisms, vitamin C induces the expression of selected genes previously shown to be responsive to low pH and oxidative stress, triggers bacterial growth arrest and promotes dormancy phenotype development in M. tb grown in axenic culture and intracellularly in THP-1 cells. Conclusions/Significance Vitamin C mimics multiple intracellular stresses and has wide-ranging regulatory effects on gene expression and physiology of M. tb which leads to growth arrest and a ‘dormant’ drug-tolerant phenotype, but in a manner independent of the DevRS/DosT sytem. The ‘AA-dormancy infection model’ offers a potential alternative to other models of non-replicating persistence of M. tb and may be useful for investigating host-‘dormant’ M. tb interactions. Our findings offer a new perspective on the role of nutritional factors in TB and suggest a possible role for vitamin C in TB.
Item Type: | Article |
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Source: | Copyright of this article belongs to Public Library of Science. |
ID Code: | 95575 |
Deposited On: | 11 Feb 2013 08:56 |
Last Modified: | 19 May 2016 08:11 |
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