Candidate transmission survival genome of .

Journal:
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, Volume: 122, Issue: 10
Published:
March 11, 2025
PMID:
40053362
Authors:
Saurabh Mishra S, Prabhat Ranjan Singh PR, Xiaoyi Hu X, Landys Lopez-Quezada L, Adrian Jinich A, Robin Jahn R, Luc Geurts L, Naijian Shen N, Michael A DeJesus MA, Travis Hartman T, Kyu Rhee K, Matthew Zimmerman M, Veronique Dartois V, Richard M Jones RM, Xiuju Jiang X, Ricardo Almada-Monter R, Lydia Bourouiba L, Carl Nathan C
Abstract:

(Mtb), a leading cause of death from infection, completes its life cycle entirely in humans except for transmission through the air. To begin to understand how Mtb survives aerosolization, we mimicked liquid and atmospheric conditions experienced by Mtb before and after exhalation using a model aerosol fluid (MAF) based on the water-soluble, lipidic, and cellular constituents of necrotic tuberculosis lesions. MAF induced drug tolerance in Mtb, remodeled its transcriptome, and protected Mtb from dying in microdroplets desiccating in air. Yet survival was not passive: Mtb appeared to rely on hundreds of genes to survive conditions associated with transmission. Essential genes subserving proteostasis offered most protection. A large number of conventionally nonessential genes appeared to contribute as well, including genes encoding proteins that resemble antidesiccants. The candidate transmission survival genome of Mtb may offer opportunities to reduce transmission of tuberculosis.


Courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine