The multifunctional histone-like protein Lsr2 protects mycobacteria against reactive oxygen intermediates.

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Citation

Colangeli R, Haq A, Arcus VL, Summers E, Magliozzo RS, McBride A, Mitra AK, Radjainia M, Khajo A, Jacobs WR Jr, Salgame P, Alland D

The multifunctional histone-like protein Lsr2 protects mycobacteria against reactive oxygen intermediates.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Mar 17;106(11):4414-8. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0810126106. Epub 2009 Feb 23.

PubMed ID
19237572 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis has evolved a number of strategies to survive within the hostile environment of host phagocytes. Reactive nitrogen and oxygen intermediates (RNI and ROI) are among the most effective antimycobacterial molecules generated by the host during infection. Lsr2 is a M. tuberculosis protein with histone-like features, including the ability to regulate a variety of transcriptional responses in mycobacteria. Here we demonstrate that Lsr2 protects mycobacteria against ROI in vitro and during macrophage infection. Furthermore, using macrophages derived from NOS(-/-) and Phox(-/-) mice, we demonstrate that Lsr2 is important in protecting against ROI but not RNI. The protection provided by Lsr2 protein is not the result of its ability to either bind iron or scavenge hydroxyl radicals. Instead, electron microscopy and DNA-binding studies suggest that Lsr2 shields DNA from reactive intermediates by binding bacterial DNA and physically protecting it. Thus, Lsr2 appears to be a unique protein with both histone-like properties and protective features that may be central to M. tuberculosis pathogenesis. In addition, evidence indicates that lsr2 is an essential gene in M. tuberculosis. Because of its essentiality, Lsr2 may represent an excellent candidate as a drug target.

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Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Nucleoid-associated protein Lsr2P9WIP7Details