Autor: |
Choudhury M; Department of Animal Biology, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, 500 046, India., Koduru TN; Department of Biotechnology & Bioinformatics, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, 500 046, India., Kumar N; Department of Animal Biology, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, 500 046, India., Salimi S; Department of Animal Biology, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, 500 046, India., Desai K; Department of Animal Biology, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, 500 046, India., Prabhu NP; Department of Biotechnology & Bioinformatics, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, 500 046, India., Sritharan M; Department of Animal Biology, University of Hyderabad, Hyderabad, 500 046, India. mssl.uoh@nic.in. |
Abstrakt: |
Iron-starved Mycobacterium tuberculosis utilises the carboxymycobactin-mycobactin siderophore machinery to acquire iron. These two siderophores have high affinity for ferric iron and can withdraw the metal ion from insoluble iron hydroxides and iron-binding proteins. We first reported HupB, a multi-functional mycobacterial protein to be associated with iron acquisition in M. tuberculosis. This 28 kDa cell wall protein, up regulated upon iron limitation functions as a transcriptional activator of mycobactin biosynthesis and is essential for the pathogen to survive inside macrophages. The focus of this study is to understand the role of HupB in iron uptake and transport by the carboxmycobactin-mycobactin siderophore machinery in M. tuberculosis. Experimental approaches included radiolabelled iron uptake studies by viable organisms and protein-ligand binding studies using the purified HupB and the two siderophores. Uptake of 55 Fe-carboxymycobactin by wild type M. tuberculosis (WT M.tb.H37Rv) and not by the hupB KO mutant (M.tb.ΔhupB) showed that HupB is necessary for the uptake of ferri-carboxymycobactin. Additionally, the radiolabel recovery was high in HupB-incorporated liposomes upon addition of the labelled siderophore. Bioinformatic and experimental studies using spectrofluorimetry, CD analysis and surface plasmon resonance not only confirmed the binding of HupB with ferri-carboxymycobactin and ferri-mycobactin but also with free iron. In conclusion, HupB is established as a ferri- carboxymycobactin receptor and by virtue of its property to bind ferric iron, functions as a transporter of the ferric iron from the extracellular siderophore to mycobactin within the cell envelope. |