TY - JOUR
T1 - A Bifunctional Chemical Reporter for in Situ Analysis of Cell Envelope Glycan Recycling in Mycobacteria.
AU - Pohane, A A
AU - Kavunja, Herbert
AU - Swarts, Benjamin
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was supported by NIH DP2 AI138238 (M.S.S.), NSF CAREER Award 1654408 (B.M.S.), Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation Henry Dreyfus Teacher-Scholar Award TH-17-034 (B.M.S.), University of Massachusetts Amherst Institute for Applied Life Sciences Midigrant (I.L.), and the University of Massachusetts Amherst Chemistry-Biology Interface Program NIH T32 GM008515 (R.A.G.). We thank Dr. Amy Burnside, director of the University of Massachusetts Amherst Flow Cytometry Core facility, for technical support.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/11/11
Y1 - 2022/11/11
N2 - In mycobacteria, the glucose-based disaccharide trehalose cycles between the cytoplasm, where it is a stress protectant and carbon source, and the cell envelope, where it is released as a byproduct of outer mycomembrane glycan biosynthesis and turnover. Trehalose recycling via the LpqY-SugABC transporter promotes virulence, antibiotic recalcitrance, and efficient adaptation to nutrient deprivation. The source(s) of trehalose and the regulation of recycling under these and other stressors are unclear. A key technical gap in addressing these questions has been the inability to trace trehalose recycling in situ, directly from its site of liberation from the cell envelope. Here we describe a bifunctional chemical reporter that simultaneously marks mycomembrane biosynthesis and subsequent trehalose recycling with alkyne and azide groups. Using this probe, we discovered that the recycling efficiency for trehalose increases upon carbon starvation, concomitant with an increase in LpqY-SugABC expression. The ability of the bifunctional reporter to probe multiple, linked steps provides a more nuanced understanding of mycobacterial cell envelope metabolism and its plasticity under stress.
AB - In mycobacteria, the glucose-based disaccharide trehalose cycles between the cytoplasm, where it is a stress protectant and carbon source, and the cell envelope, where it is released as a byproduct of outer mycomembrane glycan biosynthesis and turnover. Trehalose recycling via the LpqY-SugABC transporter promotes virulence, antibiotic recalcitrance, and efficient adaptation to nutrient deprivation. The source(s) of trehalose and the regulation of recycling under these and other stressors are unclear. A key technical gap in addressing these questions has been the inability to trace trehalose recycling in situ, directly from its site of liberation from the cell envelope. Here we describe a bifunctional chemical reporter that simultaneously marks mycomembrane biosynthesis and subsequent trehalose recycling with alkyne and azide groups. Using this probe, we discovered that the recycling efficiency for trehalose increases upon carbon starvation, concomitant with an increase in LpqY-SugABC expression. The ability of the bifunctional reporter to probe multiple, linked steps provides a more nuanced understanding of mycobacterial cell envelope metabolism and its plasticity under stress.
M3 - Article
SN - 2373-8227
VL - 8
SP - 2223
EP - 2231
JO - ACS Infectious Diseases
JF - ACS Infectious Diseases
IS - 11
ER -