These slow growing bacteria have long puzzled TB
researchers. Turns out the answer lies in the epigenetic
domain.
For a slow-growing microbe that multiplies infrequently,
Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the pathogen that causes
tuberculosis (TB) has long puzzled researchers as to how it
develops resistance to antibiotics so quickly, in a matter of
weeks to months.
Now, TB researchers at San Diego State University have uncovered
a crucial clue to the mystery: the answer may lie in the
epigenetic domain rather than the genetic domain where most
scientists have concentrated their efforts.
Their discovery could help advance new diagnostics, therapeutics
and vaccine targets.
Epigenetics is the study of inheritable changes in gene
expression that do not involve a corresponding change to the
underlying DNA sequence — meaning changes to the phenotype
but no change in the genotype. This affects only the physical
structure of the DNA, through a process called DNA methylation
where a chemical ‘cap’ is added to the DNA molecule,
preventing or facilitating the expression of certain
genes.
The SDSU researchers describe the rapid response phenomenon they
discovered as ‘intercellular mosaic methylation,’ a
process by which
Mycobacterium tuberculosis diversifies, creating
multiple subpopulations each with its own phenotype. While
antibiotics could kill many of these mutant subpopulations, at
least a few do survive and develop drug resistance.
“We believe this also explains why diagnostic testing in
some patients does not predict treatment failure, and why some
patients come back months later with the disease reemerging in a
far more resistant state,” said
Faramarz Valafar, a TB expert with SDSU’s
School of Public Health who studies the genetics and epigenetics
of pulmonary diseases. “This is also why CT scans of the
lungs of many “cured” patients show lesions with
possible bacterial activity.”
Worldwide, TB is among the top 10 causes of death. It
killed
1.5 million people in 2018 and about 10 million people fall ill with it each year,
according to the World Health Organization.
Valafar’s team collected hundreds of samples of drug
resistant varieties of the bacteria from patients in India,
China, Philippines and South Africa, as well as Europe, through
collaborations with TB researchers worldwide.
Their
study was published in eLife in late October. Valafar and
project scientist
Samuel Modlin began exploring
epigenetics for the TB bacterium in 2016, and doctoral student
Derek Conkle-Gutierrez joined them in 2018, in
the
Laboratory for Pathogenesis of Clinical Drug Resistance and
Persistence. Modlin, an SDSU alumnus, and Conkle-Gutierrez utilized skills
and knowledge they acquired at SDSU to carry out this research
— data and statistical analysis, coding skills, and
bioinformatics knowledge.
“We’ve known for decades that bacterial epigenetics
can influence the expression of certain genes, which can lead to
a variety of phenotypes even when they have identical
genotypes,” Conkle-Gutierrez said. “We discovered
evidence of that phenomenon in the TB bacterium.”
Antibiotic resistance is typically caused by genomic mutations,
but this bacterium is one of several that leverages alternative
mechanisms in the epigenetic domain to enable rapid
adaptation.
“We found that some of them had mutations that led to
variable DNA methylation and those strains had much more
diversity in their epigenome, and thus more potential to be drug
resistant,” Modlin said.
The researchers found there were no set patterns and methylation
was fairly random. They used advanced comparative genomic and
epigenetic techniques to identify variations across cells within
a colony from a single isolate, from a single patient —
including tiny variations that nevertheless impacted gene
expression. They were able to do this because, rather than
assuming the reference genome has a common structure, they
reconstructed each genome from scratch and analyzed its
epigenetic signatures.
They will now focus on testing and confirming the key genes they
identified with methylation signatures. There is more work to be
done before their discovery can eventually be used for
diagnostics.
“There is a lot of resistance in TB that escapes current
molecular diagnostics and we don’t really know why.
That’s problematic,” Valafar said. “This study
offers a new domain, new tools, and a new approach to looking
for alternative mechanisms. We move away from the classical view
of molecular diagnostics and use a novel, comprehensive approach
to analyzing bacteria.”
Current standard of care treatments use two types of antibiotics
— bacteriostatics that prevent bacteria from multiplying
but don’t kill them, and bactericides that do kill
them.
“We found a new mode of variation and if we can inhibit
that diversification mechanism, we can inhibit short-term
epigenetic resistance and kill the bacteria before mutations in
the genome develop and cause long-term, genetic
resistance,” Modlin said.
This may be how some bacterial populations survive treatment and
make the patient ill again with far greater antibiotic
resistance or hypervirulence.
The journal editors and reviewers consider their discovery to be
significant and asked the researchers to rename three of the
genes for which they describe new functions — MamC, MamS,
MamS1. The article was also featured on the cover of the
eLife magazine.
Valafar’s team has obtained two provisional patents for
their discovery. The study was funded by the National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID).
Source:
San Diego State University