Project description:Transcriptional profile comparison among Beijing and non-Beijing M. tuberculosis isolates. Three M. tuberculosis strains were compared. The laboratory reference strain, H37Rv, belongs to the Euro-American or lineage 4. Two clinical isolates of the East-Asian or lineage 2: 98_1663 is a pre-Beijing or Group 1 isolate, and HN878 is a Beijing or Group 5 isolate. Three replicates were performed for each comparison using two different biological samples.
Project description:Tuberculosis continues as an important public health problem. Particularly considering Beijing-family strains of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, which have been associated with drug-resistance and hypervirulence. The Beijing-like SIT190 (BL) is the most prevalent Beijing strain in Colombia. The pathogenic mechanism and immune response against this pathogen is unknown. Thus, we compared the course of pulmonary TB in BALB/c mice infected with Classical-Beijing strain 391 and BL strain 323. The disease course was different among infected animals with Classical-Beijing and BL strain. Mice infected with BL had a 100% mortality at 45 days post-infection (dpi), with high bacillary loads and massive pneumonia, whereas infected animals with Classical-Beijing survived until 60 dpi and showed extensive pneumonia and necrosis. Lung RNA extraction was carried out at early (day 3 dpi), intermediate (day14 dpi), and late (days 28 and 60 dpi) time points of infection. Transcriptional analysis of infected mice with Classical-Beijing showed several over-expressed genes, associated with a pro-inflammatory profile, including those for coding for CCL3 and CCL4 chemokines, both biomarkers of disease severity. Contrary, mice infected with BL displayed a profile which included the over-expression of several genes associated with immune- suppression, including Nkiras, Dleu2 and Sphk2, highlighting an anti-inflammatory milieu which would allow high bacterial replication followed by an intense inflammatory response. In summary, both Beijing strains induced a non-protective immune response which induced extensive tissue damage, BL strain induced rapidly extensive pneumonia and death, whereas Classical-Beijing strain produced slower extensive pneumonia later associated with extensive necrosis.
Project description:Nowadays proteomics is the one of the major instruments for editing and correct decryption of genomic information. Genomic correction of socially significant pathogens, like Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is by far the most relevant. We conducted proteogenomic analysis of W-148 strain, which belong to the Beijing B0/W148 cluster. Strains of this cluster possess unique pathogenic properties and have a unique genome organization. Taking into account a high similarity of cluster strains at the genomic level we analysed MS/MS datasets obtained for 63 clinical isolates of Beijing B0/W148. Based on H37Rv and W-148 annotations we identified 2,546 proteins, representing more than 60 % of total proteome. A set of peptides (n=404), specific for W-148 was found in comparison with H37Rv. Start sites for 32 genes were corrected based on combination of LC-MS/MS proteomic data with genomic six frame translation. Additionally, presence of peptides for 10 pseudogenes has been confirmed. Thus, the data obtained by us undoubtedly shows the need for conducting genome annotation based on proteomic data. Corrected during the study W-148 genome annotation will allow to use it in studies on Beijing B0/W148 cluster strains.
Project description:Autophagy is a conserved lysosomal-dependent cellular degradation process shown to play a key role in immune defense against Mycobacterium tuberculosis inside host macrophages. Induction of autophagy enhances mycobacterial phagosome acquisition of lysosomal hydrolases, resulting in the destruction of intracellular M. tuberculosis reference strain H37Rv and strains belonging to the East African Indian genotype. However, our previous study showed that strains belonging to the hypervirulent M. tuberculosis Beijing genotype have a special ability to resist autophagic killing but the mechanism involved remains unclear. In this study, we carried out whole transcriptome analyses of host macrophages infected with the autophagy resistant Beijing strain compared to that of H37Rv. Our results identified several genes that are differentially regulated in the Beijing strain-infected host cells including those function in the lysosome positioning pathway. Host macrophages depleted of Kxd1 and Pleckhm2, two proteins in this pathway, can now enhance the lysosomal hydrolase acquisition into the Beijing phagosomes and restrict the bacterial survival upon autophagy induction. High-content image analysis showed an increase in lysosome numbers at the cell periphery in host cells infected with the autophagy resistant Beijing strain in a Pleckhm2-dependent manner. Taken together, these data indicated that the M. tuberculosis Beijing strain escapes autophagic elimination by upregulating the lysosome positioning pathway resulting in an increase in lysosome relocation toward the cell periphery and therefore sparing the mycobacteria from autophagic restriction. Our work thus identified new strategy employed by M. tuberculosis to evade autophagy which may provide potential new targets for drug discovery against tuberculosis