Dear Editor,
Pyrazinamide (PZA) is an important front-line tuberculosis (TB) drug used in combination
with other TB drugs for the treatment of drug susceptible TB and MDR-TB.
1
PZA has a critical role in shortening TB therapy
2
because of its unique activity against Mycobacterium tuberculosis persisters that
are not killed by other TB drugs.
1
Despite the importance of PZA in shortening the treatment, its mechanism of action
is the least understood of all TB drugs.
1, 2
Mutation in the pncA gene encoding nicotinamidase/pyrazinamidase (PZase)
3
involved in conversion of the prodrug PZA to the active form pyrazinoic acid (POA)
is the major mechanism for PZA resistance in M. tuberculosis.
3, 4, 5
A new target of PZA was identified as ribosomal protein S1 (RpsA) involved in trans-translation,
6
which is involved in degradation of toxic protein buildup in stressed bacteria needed
for persister survival. However, some low level PZA-resistant strains (MIC=200–300 μg/mL,
pH 6) do not have mutations in either pncA or rpsA gene.
5, 7
To identify new mechanisms of PZA resistance, we recently characterized a large number
of in vitro
M. tuberculosis mutants resistant to PZA and identified a third gene panD encoding
aspartate decarboxylase as a new mechanism of PZA resistance and action.
8, 9
In that study, in addition to panD mutations, we also found mutations in other genes
such as ppsA encoding polyketide synthase involved in phthiocerol dimycocerosate (PDIM)
synthesis, (3R)-hydroxyacyl-ACP dehydratase subunit HadC, acyl-CoA synthetase, cell
division protein FtsH, phosphate ABC transporter permease protein PstC2, transmembrane
transport protein MmpL4, putative transmembrane cation transporter and TetR family
transcriptional regulator (Supplementary Table 1 of Zhang et al.
8
). However, we did not follow up on these candidate genes as all the mutant strains
had panD mutations in addition to the above gene mutations. A recent study reported
ppsA-E operon nonsense mutations were associated with PZA resistance based on whole-genome
sequencing analysis of POA-resistant mutants
10
using selection with high POA concentrations at neutral pH, a condition that was previously
shown to allow POA-resistant mutants to be successfully isolated instead of conventional
acid pH used for drug susceptibility testing.
9
However, it is unclear how ppsA-E mutations cause PZA/POA resistance.
As we know there are other PZA-resistant strains such as strain 9739(5) that do not
have mutations in any of the known genes pncA, rpsA or panD involved in PZA resistance,
in this study, to identify possible new mechanisms of PZA resistance, we characterized
additional low level PZA-resistant M. tuberculosis H37Rv mutants (MIC=200, 300 μg/mL
PZA, pH 60) identified in the previous study.
8
By sequencing the known genes involved in PZA resistance including pncA, rpsA and
panD, we were able to identify one low level PZA-resistant mutant S14 (MIC=200–300 μg/mL
PZA, pH 6) that did not have any mutations in pncA, rpsA or panD. The genomic DNA
from the PZA-resistant mutant S14 was isolated and subjected to whole-genome sequencing
as described previously.
8
Comparative sequence analysis of the PZA-resistant mutant S14 with the parent strain
M. tuberculosis H37Rv as a reference revealed a single unique mutation of G to T change
at nucleotide position 296 (G296T), causing amino acid change G99D in a new gene clpC1
(Rv3596c), which encodes an ATP-dependent ATPase involved in protein degradation in
conjunction with ClpP1 and ClpP2. Subsequent PCR was performed to amplify the clpC1
gene from the PZA-resistant mutant S14 using forward primer F: 5′-ACG CTT GGG TGG
TTT TCT CGT TTA TCT CCT ATG-3′, and reverse primer R: 5′-ACA AAC CGA CGT CAG CAG AGT
CTA TTGTCA-3′. Sanger DNA sequencing of the clpC1 PCR product verified the above mutation
(G296T change, causing amino acid substitution G99D) identified by whole-genome sequencing
to be genuine.
The M. tuberculosis ClpC1 is an 848-amino acid protein, which belongs to the large
AAA family of ATPases. Owing to its essentiality in M. tuberculosis,
11
ClpC1 has been proposed as a good drug target. ClpC1 is a hexamer that recognizes
misfolded proteins and forms a complex with protease ClpP1 and ClpP2 to perform the
function of protein degradation, a process that requires ATP hydrolysis by the ATPase
activity of ClpC1.
11
Interestingly, ClpC1 has recently been found to be a target of three new cyclic peptide
antibiotics including cyclomarin A,
12
lassomycin
13
and ecumicin.
14
The three new drug candidates appear to bind at the different sites of the ClpC1.
For example, mutations of clpC1 that caused resistance to lassomycin clustered at
the N-terminal repeat region at Q17R, R21S and P79T.
13
It is interesting to note that ecumicin-resistant mutations are located at L92S or
F or L96P sites of the ClpC1 in M. tuberculosis,
14
which are close to the G99D mutation in our PZA-resistant mutant S14. Because we found
the PZA-resistant mutant S14 without pncA, rpsA and panD mutations had the ClpC1 G99D
mutation (see above), we wanted to test if the two ecumicin-resistant strains with
ClpC1 mutations L96P and L96F are resistant to PZA. Interestingly, we found that both
L96P and L96F ClpC1 mutants were only marginally resistant to PZA (MIC=50 and 100 μg/mL
PZA, respectively, pH 6, compared with susceptible control strain H37Rv, MIC<50 μg/ml),
which were more susceptible to PZA than S14 with the ClpC1 mutation G99D (PZA MIC=200–300 μg/mL
PZA, pH 6). This could indicate that certain sites such as G99D may be preferentially
involved in POA binding and confer higher resistance than adjacent sites in L96P and
L96F ClpC1 mutants. Further studies are required to confirm this possibility.
It is worth noting that all three new cyclic peptide antibiotics are active against
both replicating and non-replicating mycobacteria, indicating ClpC1 could be an important
drug target for both growing and persister bacteria. The anti-persister activity of
the cyclic peptide antibiotics via their action on the protein degradation pathway
is consistent with the previous observation that PZA, a well-known persister drug,
shows its anti-persister activity at least partly through its inhibition of trans-translation,
6
as part of the bacterial protein degradation systems. Future studies are needed to
address if PZA alters ClpC1 activity thereby affecting protein degradation function
of the ClpC1/ClpP1/ClpP2 complex leading to increased toxic protein buildup in M.
tuberculosis.
To confirm that ClpC1 is a possible target of PZA, we cloned the M. tuberculosis clpC1
gene and its promoter (174 bp upstream of the coding sequence) into pOLYG vector using
the primers clpC1 F 5′-GCG AAG CTT TTT TCT CGT TTA TCT CCT ATG C-3′ and clpC1 R 5′-ACA
GGA TCC CGT CAG CAG AGT CTA TTG TCA-3′. The pOLYG-clpC1 and empty vector were electroporated
into M. tuberculosis H37Ra and the transformants were tested for PZA susceptibility
at 0, 25, 50, 100, 200 and 400 μg/mL PZA (pH 5.9). However, the pOLYG-clpC1 behaved
similarly as the pOLYG empty vector control as they did not grow at 50 μg/mL or higher
concentrations of PZA, indicating overexpression of clpC1 at least from its own promoter
did not confer significant PZA resistance (data not shown).
While our study was ongoing, we noticed a recent study by Yee et al.
15
who identified clpC1 mutations from POA-resistant mutants that did not have panD mutations
to be associated with POA resistance. Although we found the clpC1 mutation in a single
PZA-resistant mutant that did not have known PZA resistance mutations in pncA, rpsA
and panD for some time,
8
we withheld the publication of our clpC1 results, largely because overexpression of
the wild type clpC1 in M. tuberculosis did not seem to confer significant resistance
to PZA (MIC<50 μg/mL, pH 5.9; data not shown) and that we wanted to determine if ecumicin-resistant
clpC1 mutants are also resistant to PZA, which seemed to cause only marginal PZA resistance
(see data above).
Identifying new mechanisms of PZA resistance using clinical isolates has been difficult
because of the diverse genetic background of the clinical strains. Here, by using
whole-genome sequencing of isogenic mutants resistant to PZA derived from the same
strain H37Rv, we were able to identify a single mutation in the clpC1 gene as a possible
new mechanism of PZA resistance in addition to the known PZA resistance genes pncA,
rpsA and panD. The mode of action of PZA is complex and it is becoming increasingly
clear that PZA interferes with multiple targets involved in persister survival in
M. tuberculosis.
1
Future studies are needed to address the role of the identified clpC1 mutations as
a new mechanism of PZA resistance and confirm if ClpC1 serves as a possible new target
of PZA in M. tuberculosis.