Affiliation:
1. Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, CRB2, Room 1.08, 1550 Orleans Street, Baltimore, Maryland 21231-1044
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Alternate sigma factors have been implicated in the survival of mycobacteria in response to specific stresses. To characterize the role of SigM in
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
, a
sigM
deletion mutant was generated by allelic exchange in the virulent CDC1551 strain. Comparing the wild-type and Δ
sigM
strains by complete genomic microarray, we observed a low level of baseline expression of
sigM
in wild-type
M. tuberculosis
and no significant differences in the gene expression patterns between these two strains. Alternatively, a SigM-overexpressing
M. tuberculosis
strain was constructed and microarray profiling revealed SigM-dependent expression of a relatively small group of genes, which included four
esat-6
homologues:
esxE
,
esxF
,
esxT
, and
esxU
. An assessment of SigM-dependent promoters from the microarray analysis revealed a putative consensus sequence for
M. tuberculosis
SigM of −35 GGAAC and −10 CGTCR. In vitro expression studies showed that
M. tuberculosis sigM
transcripts accumulate slightly in stationary phase and following heat shock. To understand the role of SigM in pathogenesis, the
M. tuberculosis sigM
deletion strain was compared with the isogenic wild-type strain and the complemented mutant strain for survival in murine macrophages and in the mouse model. The mutant was found to have similar abilities to survive in both the resting and activated J774A.1 macrophages. Mouse organ bacterial burdens indicated that the mutant proliferated and persisted at the same level as that of the wild-type and complemented strains in lung and spleen tissues. In time-to-death experiments in the mouse model, the Δ
sigM
mutant exhibited lethality times comparable to those observed for the wild-type and complemented strains. These data indicate that
M. tuberculosis
SigM governs the expression of a small set of genes, including four
esat-6
homologues, and that the loss of
sigM
does not confer a detectable virulence defect in the macrophages and mouse models of infection.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
Infectious Diseases,Immunology,Microbiology,Parasitology
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