Toxin-antitoxin systems and regulatory mechanisms in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Slayden RA, Dawson CC, Cummings JE
Pathogens and disease · 2018-06
Abstract
There has been a significant reduction in annual tuberculosis incidence since the World Health Organization declared tuberculosis a global health threat. However, treatment of M. tuberculosis infections requires lengthy multidrug therapeutic regimens to achieve a durable cure. The development of new drugs that are active against resistant strains and phenotypically diverse organisms continues to present the greatest challenge in the future. Numerous phylogenomic analyses have revealed that the Mtb genome encodes a significantly expanded repertoire of toxin-antitoxin (TA) loci that makes up the Mtb TA system. A TA loci is a two-gene operon encoding a 'toxin' protein that inhibits bacterial growth and an interacting 'antitoxin' partner that neutralizes the inhibitory activity of the toxin. The presence of multiple chromosomally encoded TA loci in Mtb raises important questions in regard to expansion, regulation and function. Thus, the functional roles of TA loci in Mtb pathogenesis have received considerable attention over the last decade. The cumulative results indicate that they are involved in regulating adaptive responses to stresses associated with the host environment and drug treatment. Here we review the TA families encoded in Mtb, discuss the duplication of TA loci in Mtb, regulatory mechanism of TA loci, and phenotypic heterogeneity and pathogenesis.
MeSH terms
- Humans
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Tuberculosis
- Bacterial Toxins
- Antitoxins
- Phylogeny
- Signal Transduction
- Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial
- Genetic Heterogeneity
- Genome, Bacterial
- Operon
- Host-Pathogen Interactions
- Genetic Loci
- Chromosome Duplication
- Toxin-Antitoxin Systems