Dual functioning by the PhoR sensor is a key determinant to Mycobacterium tuberculosis virulence. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • PhoP-PhoR, one of the 12 two-component systems (TCSs) that empower M. tuberculosis to sense and adapt to diverse environmental conditions, remains essential for virulence, and therefore, represents a major target to develop novel anti-TB therapies. Although both PhoP and PhoR have been structurally characterized, the signal(s) that this TCS responds to remains unknown. Here, we show that PhoR is a sensor of acidic pH/high salt conditions, which subsequently activate PhoP via phosphorylation. In keeping with this, transcriptomic data uncover that acidic pH- inducible expression of PhoP regulon is significantly inhibited in a PhoR-deleted M. tuberculosis. Strikingly, a set of PhoP regulon genes displayed a low pH-dependent activation even in the absence of PhoR, suggesting the presence of non-canonical mechanism(s) of PhoP activation. Using genome-wide interaction-based screening coupled with phosphorylation assays, we identify a non-canonical mechanism of PhoP phosphorylation by the sensor kinase PrrB. To investigate how level of P~PhoP is regulated, we discovered that in addition to its kinase activity PhoR functions as a phosphatase of P~PhoP. Our subsequent results identify the motif/residues responsible for kinase/phosphatase dual functioning of PhoR. Collectively, these results uncover that contrasting kinase and phosphatase functions of PhoR determine the homeostatic mechanism of regulation of intra-mycobacterial P~PhoP which controls the final output of the PhoP regulon. Together, these results connect PhoR to pH-dependent activation of PhoP with downstream functioning of the regulator. Thus, PhoR plays a central role in mycobacterial adaptation to low pH conditions within the host macrophage phagosome, and a PhoR-deleted M. tuberculosis remains significantly attenuated in macrophages and animal models.

authors

  • Singh, Prabhat Ranjan
  • Goar, Harsh
  • Paul, Partha
  • Mehta, Khushboo
  • Bamniya, Bhanwar
  • Vijjamarri, Anil Kumar
  • Bansal, Roohi
  • Khan, Hina
  • Karthikeyan, Subramanian
  • Sarkar, Dibyendu

publication date

  • December 15, 2023

Research

keywords

  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Tuberculosis

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC10723718

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85179897337

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1371/journal.pgen.1011070

PubMed ID

  • 38100394

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 19

issue

  • 12