Phosphorylation of mycobacterial PcaA inhibits mycolic acid cyclopropanation: consequences for intracellular survival and for phagosome maturation block.

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Citation

Corrales RM, Molle V, Leiba J, Mourey L, de Chastellier C, Kremer L

Phosphorylation of mycobacterial PcaA inhibits mycolic acid cyclopropanation: consequences for intracellular survival and for phagosome maturation block.

J Biol Chem. 2012 Jul 27;287(31):26187-99. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M112.373209. Epub 2012 May 23.

PubMed ID
22621931 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Pathogenic mycobacteria survive within macrophages by residing in phagosomes, which they prevent from maturing and fusing with lysosomes. Although several bacterial components were seen to modulate phagosome processing, the molecular regulatory mechanisms taking part in this process remain elusive. We investigated whether the phagosome maturation block (PMB) could be modulated by signaling through Ser/Thr phosphorylation. Here, we demonstrated that mycolic acid cyclopropane synthase PcaA, but not MmaA2, was phosphorylated by mycobacterial Ser/Thr kinases at Thr-168 and Thr-183 both in vitro and in mycobacteria. Phosphorylation of PcaA was associated with a significant decrease in the methyltransferase activity, in agreement with the strategic structural localization of these two phosphoacceptors. Using a BCG DeltapcaA mutant, we showed that PcaA was required for intracellular survival and prevention of phagosome maturation in human monocyte-derived macrophages. The physiological relevance of PcaA phosphorylation was further assessed by generating PcaA phosphoablative (T168A/T183A) or phosphomimetic (T168D/T183D) mutants. In contrast to the wild-type and phosphoablative pcaA alleles, introduction of the phosphomimetic pcaA allele in the DeltapcaA mutant failed to restore the parental mycolic acid profile and cording morphotype. Importantly, the PcaA phosphomimetic strain, as the DeltapcaA mutant, exhibited reduced survival in human macrophages and was unable to prevent phagosome maturation. Our results add new insight into the importance of mycolic acid cyclopropane rings in the PMB and provide the first evidence of a Ser/Thr kinase-dependent mechanism for modulating mycolic acid composition and PMB.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Cyclopropane mycolic acid synthase 3P9WPB3Details