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    Date Issued2017 (2)Author
    Galan, Beatriz (2)
    Garcia, Jose L. (2)Garcia-Fernandez, Julia (2)Papavinasasundaram, Kadamba (2)Sassetti, Christopher M. (2)UMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Microbiology and Physiological Systems (2)UMass Metabolic Network (2)Document TypeJournal Article (2)KeywordCellular and Molecular Physiology (2)Environmental Microbiology and Microbial Ecology (2)Microbial Physiology (1)View MoreJournalEnvironmental microbiology (2)

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    Molecular and functional analysis of the mce4 operon in Mycobacterium smegmatis

    Garcia-Fernandez, Julia; Papavinasasundaram, Kadamba; Galan, Beatriz; Sassetti, Christopher M.; Garcia, Jose L. (2017-09-01)
    Mycobacterium smegmatis contains 6 homologous mce (mammalian cell entry) operons which have been proposed to encode ABC-like import systems. The mce operons encode up to 10 different proteins of unknown function that are not present in conventional ABC transporters. We have analysed the consequences of individually deleting each of the genes of the mce4 operon of M. smegmatis, which mediates the transport of cholesterol. None of the mce4 mutants were able to grow in cholesterol suggesting that all these genes are required for its uptake and that none of them can be replaced by the homologous genes of the other mce operons. This result suggests that different mce operons do not provide redundant capabilities and that M. smegmatis, in contrast with Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is not able to use alternative systems to import cholesterol in the analysed culture conditions. Either deletion of the entire mce4 operon or single point mutations that eliminate the transport function cause a phenotype similar to the one observed in a mutant lacking all 6 mce operons suggesting a pleiotropic role for this system.
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    Unravelling the pleiotropic role of the MceG ATPase in Mycobacterium smegmatis

    Garcia-Fernandez, Julia; Papavinasasundaram, Kadamba; Galan, Beatriz; Sassetti, Christopher M.; Garcia, Jose L. (2017-04-26)
    The Mce systems are complex ABC transporters that are encoded by different numbers of homologous operons in Actinobacteria. While the four Mce systems of Mycobacterium tuberculosis are all energized by a single ATPase, MceG, each system appears to import different fatty acids or sterols. To explore if this behaviour can be extended to saprophytic mycobacteria, whose more complex genomes encode more Mce systems, we have identified and characterized the MceG orthologue of Mycobacterium smegmatis. This bacterium relies on MceG to energize its six Mce systems that contribute to a variety of cellular functions including sterol uptake and cell envelope maintenance. In the absence of MceG, M. smegmatis was not able to utilize cholesterol or phytosterols as carbon sources implying that this ATPase is necessary to energize the Mce4-sterol transport system. Other phenotypic alterations observed in the DeltaMceG mutant, such as cell envelope modifications, suggest a pleiotropic functionality of the Mce systems that are particularly important for stress responses. Several DeltaMceG phenotypes were recapitulated in a strain lacking only the unique C-terminal region of MceG, suggesting an important functional or regulatory function for this domain.
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