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Regulatory genes coordinating antibiotic-induced changes in promoter activity and early transcriptional termination of the mycobacterial intrinsic resistance gene whiB7.

Molecular Microbiology 2018 Februrary
Diseases caused by various Mycobacterium sp., especially Mycobacterium tuberculosis, are a major burden on global health care. Due to high intrinsic antibiotic resistance, treatment options are severely limited. In mycobacteria, WhiB7 coordinates intrinsic resistance to a broad range of antibiotics. While WhiB7 has been established as an auto-regulatory transcriptional activator, the signals and genes needed to induce its expression are poorly understood. Using Mycobacterium smegmatis as a model, we coupled transposon mutagenesis and next generation sequencing with WhiB7-specific antibiotic selection to identify genes that contribute to WhiB7 regulation and function. We showed that whiB7 expression was regulated by two coordinated processes: early termination of the whiB7 transcript and increased whiB7 promoter activity. Early termination was irreversibly maintained by constitutive expression of a putative aspartate aminotransferase gene, MSMEG_4060. A pair of hypothetical genes, MSMEG_3637 and MSMEG_3638, were identified as important contributors to whiB7 promoter induction on antibiotic challenge. Expansion of our understanding of the WhiB7-resistance pathway may lead to identification of inhibitors that allow the use of previously ineffective antibiotics to treat mycobacterial diseases.

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