Engineered Mycobacterium tuberculosis triple-kill-switch strain provides controlled tuberculosis infection in animal models.

Journal:
Nature microbiology, Volume: 10, Issue: 2
Published:
February 10, 2025
PMID:
39794471
Authors:
Xin Wang X, Hongwei Su H, Joshua B Wallach JB, Jeffrey C Wagner JC, Benjamin J Braunecker BJ, Michelle Gardner M, Kristine M Guinn KM, Nicole C Howard NC, Thais Klevorn T, Kan Lin K, Yue J Liu YJ, Yao Liu Y, Douaa Mugahid D, Mark Rodgers M, Jaimie Sixsmith J, Shoko Wakabayashi S, Junhao Zhu J, Matthew Zimmerman M, VĂ©ronique Dartois V, JoAnne L Flynn JL, Philana Ling Lin PL, Sabine Ehrt S, Sarah M Fortune SM, Eric J Rubin EJ, Dirk Schnappinger D
Abstract:

Human challenge experiments could accelerate tuberculosis vaccine development. This requires a safe Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) strain that can both replicate in the host and be reliably cleared. Here we genetically engineered Mtb strains encoding up to three kill switches: two mycobacteriophage lysin operons negatively regulated by tetracycline and a degron domain-NadE fusion, which induces ClpC1-dependent degradation of the essential enzyme NadE, negatively regulated by trimethoprim. The triple-kill-switch (TKS) strain showed similar growth kinetics and antibiotic susceptibilities to wild-type Mtb under permissive conditions but was rapidly killed in vitro without trimethoprim and doxycycline. It established infection in mice receiving antibiotics but was rapidly cleared upon cessation of treatment, and no relapse was observed in infected severe combined immunodeficiency mice or Rag mice. The TKS strain had an escape mutation rate of less than 10 per genome per generation. These findings suggest that the TKS strain could be a safe, effective candidate for a human challenge model.


Courtesy of the U.S. National Library of Medicine