Cysteine desulfurase (IscS)–mediated fine-tuning of bioenergetics and SUF expression prevents Mycobacterium tuberculosis hypervirulence | Science Advances
Abstract
Iron-sulfur (Fe-S) biogenesis requires multiprotein assembly systems, SUF and ISC, in most prokaryotes.
M. tuberculosis
(
Mtb
) encodes a complete SUF system, the depletion of which was bactericidal. The ISC operon is truncated to a single gene
iscS
(cysteine desulfurase), whose function remains uncertain. Here, we show that
Mtb
Δ
iscS
is bioenergetically deficient and hypersensitive to oxidative stress, antibiotics, and hypoxia.
Mtb
Δ
iscS
resisted killing by nitric oxide (NO). RNA sequencing indicates that IscS is important for expressing regulons of DosR and Fe-S–containing transcription factors, WhiB3 and SufR. Unlike wild-type
Mtb
,
Mtb
Δ
iscS
could not enter a stable persistent state, continued replicating in mice, and showed hypervirulence. The
suf
operon was overexpressed in
Mtb
Δ
iscS
during infection in a NO-dependent manner. Suppressing
suf
expression in
Mtb
Δ
iscS
either by CRISPR interference or upon infection in inducible NO-deficient mice arrests hypervirulence. Together,
Mtb
redesigned the ISC system to “fine-tune” the expression of SUF machinery for establishing persistence without causing detrimental disease in the host.