Intracellular glutamine fluctuates with nitrogen availability and regulates Mycobacterium smegmatis biofilm formation

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Biofilm formation allows pathogenic nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) to adhere to household plumbing systems and has been observed in vivo during human infection. Glucose drives NTM aggregation in vitro , and ammonium inhibits it, but the regulatory systems controlling this early step in biofilm formation are not understood. Here, we show that a variety of carbon and nitrogen sources have similar impacts on aggregation in the model NTM Mycobacterium smegmatis as glucose and ammonium, suggesting that the response to these nutrients is general and likely sensed through downstream, integrated signals. Next, we performed a transposon screen in M. smegmatis to uncover these putative regulatory nodes. Our screen revealed that mutating specific genes in the purine and pyrimidine biosynthesis pathways caused an aggregation defect, but supplementing with adenosine and guanosine had no impact on aggregation either in a purF mutant or WT. Realizing that the only genes we hit in purine or pyrimidine biosynthesis were those that utilized glutamine as a nitrogen donor, we pivoted to the hypothesis that intracellular glutamine could be a nitrogen-responsive node affecting aggregation. We tested this hypothesis in defined M63 medium using targeted mass spectrometry. Indeed, intracellular glutamine increased with nitrogen availability and correlated with planktonic growth. Furthermore, a garA mutant, which has an artificially expanded glutamine pool in growth phase, grew solely as planktonic cells even without nitrogen supplementation. Altogether these results establish that intracellular glutamine controls M. smegmatis aggregation, and they introduce flux-dependent sensors as key components of the NTM biofilm regulatory system.

Importance

A subset of nontuberculous mycobacteria (NTM), including Mycobacterium abscessus , are opportunistic pathogens that can cause severe pulmonary infections. M. abscessus is present in showerhead biofilms, one of the reservoirs from which it can infect susceptible individuals. Moreover, M. abscessus can exist as biofilms during pulmonary infections, and biofilm formation in vitro renders M. abscessus more tolerant to antibiotics. The ability to inhibit NTM biofilm formation could therefore help us better prevent and treat NTM infections. However, the regulatory systems controlling NTM biofilm formation, which could include targets for anti-biofilm therapeutics, are poorly understood. The significance of this work is that it reveals intracellular glutamine as an important node controlling initiation of biofilm formation in the model NTM Mycobacterium smegmatis . Building on this foundation, future studies will investigate how NTM biofilms can be dispersed by altering glutamine levels and will describe how NTM translates intracellular glutamine to alteration of surface adhesins.

Article activity feed