Cunningham A F, Spreadbury C L
Department of Infection, The Medical School, University of Birmingham, United Kingdom.
J Bacteriol. 1998 Feb;180(4):801-8. doi: 10.1128/JB.180.4.801-808.1998.
Most cases of tuberculosis are due to reactivation of endogenous infection which may have lain quiescent or dormant for decades. How Mycobacterium tuberculosis survives for this length of time is unknown, but it is hypothesized that reduced oxygen tension may trigger the tubercle bacillus to enter a state of dormancy. Mycobacterium bovis BCG and M. tuberculosis H37Rv were cultured under aerobic, microaerobic, and anaerobic conditions. Their ultrastructural morphology was analyzed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and protein expression profiles were compared by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). TEM revealed that the microaerobically and anaerobically cultured bacilli but not the aerobically cultured bacilli developed a strikingly thickened cell wall outer layer. The thickening was not observed in aerobically cultured stationary-phase bacilli or in anaerobically cultured Mycobacterium smegmatis. A highly expressed protein was detected by SDS-PAGE in microaerobic and anaerobic cultures and was identified as the 16-kDa small heat shock protein or alpha-crystallin homolog. Immunolocalization by colloidal gold immunoelectron microscopy identified three patterns of protein distribution in M. bovis BCG cultured under low oxygen tension. The 16-kDa protein was strongly associated with the cell envelope, fibrous peptidoglycan-like structures, and intracellular and peripheral clusters. These results suggest that tubercle bacilli may adapt to low-oxygen conditions by developing a thickened cell wall and that the 16-kDa protein may play a role in stabilizing cell structures during long-term survival, thus helping the bacilli survive the low oxygen tension in granulomas. As such, the cell wall thickening and the 16-kDa protein may be markers for the dormant state of M. tuberculosis.
大多数结核病病例是由于内源性感染的重新激活,这种感染可能已经潜伏或休眠数十年。结核分枝杆菌如何在这么长的时间内存活尚不清楚,但据推测,低氧张力可能会促使结核杆菌进入休眠状态。牛分枝杆菌卡介苗(Mycobacterium bovis BCG)和结核分枝杆菌H37Rv在需氧、微需氧和厌氧条件下培养。通过透射电子显微镜(TEM)分析它们的超微结构形态,并通过十二烷基硫酸钠-聚丙烯酰胺凝胶电泳(SDS-PAGE)比较蛋白质表达谱。TEM显示,微需氧和厌氧培养的杆菌,而非需氧培养的杆菌,形成了显著增厚的细胞壁外层。在需氧培养的稳定期杆菌或厌氧培养的耻垢分枝杆菌中未观察到这种增厚现象。通过SDS-PAGE在微需氧和厌氧培养物中检测到一种高表达蛋白,鉴定为16 kDa的小分子热休克蛋白或α-晶体蛋白同源物。通过胶体金免疫电子显微镜进行的免疫定位确定了在低氧张力下培养的牛分枝杆菌卡介苗中蛋白质分布的三种模式。16 kDa蛋白与细胞膜、纤维状肽聚糖样结构以及细胞内和周边簇强烈相关。这些结果表明,结核杆菌可能通过形成增厚的细胞壁来适应低氧条件,并且16 kDa蛋白可能在长期存活期间稳定细胞结构中发挥作用,从而帮助杆菌在肉芽肿中的低氧张力下存活。因此,细胞壁增厚和16 kDa蛋白可能是结核分枝杆菌休眠状态的标志物。