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Mycobacterium tuberculosis Is Resistant to Isoniazid at a Slow Growth Rate by Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in katG Codon Ser315
Authors:Rose E Jeeves  Alice A N Marriott  Steven T Pullan  Kim A Hatch  Jon C Allnutt  Irene Freire-Martin  Charlotte L Hendon-Dunn  Robert Watson  Adam A Witney  Richard H Tyler  Catherine Arnold  Philip D Marsh  Timothy D McHugh  Joanna Bacon
Institution:1. Public Health England, Porton Down, Salisbury, United Kingdom.; 2. St George''s, University of London, Cranmer Terrace, London, United Kingdom.; 3. Public Health England, Colindale, 61 Colindale Avenue, London, United Kingdom.; 4. University College London, Centre for Clinical Microbiology, Royal Free Campus, Rowland Hill Street, London, United Kingdom.; St. Petersburg Pasteur Institute, RUSSIAN FEDERATION,
Abstract:An important aim for improving TB treatment is to shorten the period of antibiotic therapy without increasing relapse rates or encouraging the development of antibiotic-resistant strains. In any M. tuberculosis population there is a proportion of bacteria that are drug-tolerant; this might be because of pre-existing populations of slow growing/non replicating bacteria that are protected from antibiotic action due to the expression of a phenotype that limits drug activity. We addressed this question by observing populations of either slow growing (constant 69.3h mean generation time) or fast growing bacilli (constant 23.1h mean generation time) in their response to the effects of isoniazid exposure, using controlled and defined growth in chemostats. Phenotypic differences were detected between the populations at the two growth rates including expression of efflux mechanisms and the involvement of antisense RNA/small RNA in the regulation of a drug-tolerant phenotype, which has not been explored previously for M. tuberculosis. Genotypic analyses showed that slow growing bacilli develop resistance to isoniazid through mutations specifically in katG codon Ser315 which are present in approximately 50–90% of all isoniazid-resistant clinical isolates. The fast growing bacilli persisted as a mixed population with katG mutations distributed throughout the gene. Mutations in katG codon Ser315 appear to have a fitness cost in vitro and particularly in fast growing cultures. Our results suggest a requirement for functional katG-encoded catalase-peroxide in the slow growers but not the fast-growing bacteria, which may explain why katG codon Ser315 mutations are favoured in the slow growing cultures.
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