Activation of l-histidine biosynthesis as a new antibiotic strategy against Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Debbie M. Hunt, João Pedro Pisco, Angela Rodgers, Cesira de Chiara, Anisha Zaveri, Kamila L. Pacholarz, Dimitrios Evangelopoulos, Acely Garza-Garcia, et al. (13 authors)
Nature Communications · 2026-03
Abstract
The increasing prevalence of antimicrobial resistance is an important challenge that warrants new approaches to antibiotic development. Currently, all antibiotics inhibit biological processes. To explore whether activation of a biochemical pathway can elicit bactericidal effects we engineered variants of Mycobacterium tuberculosis ATP-phosphoribosyltransferase (ATP-PRT) that are resistant to allosteric inhibition by L-histidine, leading to supraphysiological activation of ATP-PRT and L-histidine overproduction. Upregulation of L-histidine biosynthesis significantly reduces the growth of M. tuberculosis in culture and causes a loss of fitness owing to nutrient and energy depletion. Moreover, the expression of allosteric variants in M. tuberculosis significantly reduced infections in human macrophages and in a mouse model of infection. Thus, metabolic activation represents a new mycobactericidal mechanism that could be applied to antimycobacterial drug discovery.
MeSH terms
- Antimycobacterial
- Allosteric regulation
- Mycobacterium tuberculosis
- Antibiotics
- Microbiology
- Downregulation and upregulation
- Antibiotic resistance
- Biosynthesis
- Antimicrobial
- Biology
- Drug resistance
- Metabolic pathway
- Tuberculosis
- Mechanism (biology)
- Bacteria
- Chemistry
- Drug
- Mycobacterium
- Drug development
- Multidrug tolerance