TB Research

Origin and Dynamics of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Subpopulations That Predictably Generate Drug Tolerance and Resistance

Jees Sebastian, Anooja Thomas, Carly Levine, Riju Shrestha, Shawn Levy, Hassan Safi, Sri Ram Pentakota, Pradeep Kumar, et al. (9 authors)

mBio · 2022-11

Abstract

Tuberculosis is unusual among bacterial diseases in that treatments which can rapidly resolve symptoms do not predictably lead to a durable cure unless treatment is continued for months after all clinical and microbiological signs of disease have been eradicated. Using a novel steady-state antibiotic exposure system combined with chromosomal barcoding, we identified small hidden Mycobacterium tuberculosis subpopulations that repeatedly enter a state of drug tolerance with a predisposition to develop fixed drug resistance after first developing a cloud of unfixed resistance mutations. The existence of these difficult-to-eradicate subpopulations may explain the need for extended treatment regimen for tuberculosis. Their identification provides opportunities to test genetic and therapeutic approaches that may result in shorter and more effective TB treatments.

MeSH terms

  • Mycobacterium tuberculosis
  • Drug resistance
  • Tuberculosis
  • Biology
  • Population
  • Drug tolerance
  • Drug
  • Multidrug tolerance
  • Phenotype
  • Rifampicin
  • Genetics
  • Microbiology