Abstract:
The global control and management of tuberculosis (TB), caused by Mycobacterium
tuberculosis, is faced with the formidable challenge of worsening scenarios of drug-resistant
disease. Pyrazinamide (PZA) is one of four first-line drugs used in standard short-course
combination therapy for the treatment of both drug-sensitive TB (DS-TB) and drug-resistant
TB (DR-TB). It exhibits a preferential sterilizing activity against non-replicating persistent
bacilli with low metabolism at acidic pH, and is thus anticipated to be an irreplaceable
component of future first-line TB drug regimens. Although the mechanism of PZA
activation by the enzyme pyrazinamidase (PZase), encoded by pncA gene, into its active
moiety, pyrazinoic acid (POA), and resistance has been characterized, the precise cellular
targets and physiological functions in M. tuberculosis that are inhibited by POA remain
elusive. The ribosomal protein S1 (RpsA) and the aspartate decarboxylase (panD), involved
in trans-translation and the synthesis of the essential metabolic cofactors pantothenate and
coenzyme A respectively, have been suggested to be the targets of POA.
In this study however, sequencing analysis has identified the same G199A (Asp67Asn) nonsynonymous
substitution in Rv2783c of 2 PZA-resistant clinical strains lacking mutations
in pncA, rpsA and panD. M. tuberculosis Rv2783c encode a probable bifunctional enzyme:
polyribonucleotide nucleotidyltransferase (PNPase), involved in RNA and single stranded-
DNA (ss-DNA) metabolism; and guanosine pentaphosphate synthetase (GpsI), involved in
Molecular targets and mechanisms of action of PZA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
IV
the synthesis and degradation of the alarmones guanosine tetraphosphate (ppGpp) and
guanosine pentaphosphate (pppGpp) implicated in the stringent response in bacteria. To
gain more insight into a possible new target of PZA, we overexpressed the Rv2783cG199A
mutant in M. tuberculosis H37Rv which resulted in PZA resistance in vitro, while
overexpression of the wild type Rv2783c did not cause PZA resistance. Using isothermal
titration calorimetry (ITC), purified wild type M. tuberculosis Rv2783 protein was found to
bind to POA, and not to the prodrug PZA. However, purified M. tuberculosis Rv2783D67N
protein and PNPase from naturally PZA-resistant M. smegmatis failed to bind either POA
or PZA. In addition, both wild type and the mutant M. tuberculosis Rv2783 proteins
catalyzed both template-independent RNA and ss-DNA polymerization and phosphorolysis
activities. Interestingly however, the ss-DNA and RNA catalytic activities of the wild type
and not the Rv2783D67N mutant protein were significantly inhibited by POA and not the prodrug
PZA. Moreover, both wild type and the mutant M. tuberculosis Rv2783 proteins
demonstrated strong ppGpp hydrolysis but only weak ppGpp synthesis activities. Similarly,
the ppGpp hydrolysis activity of the wild type but not the Rv2783D67N mutant protein was
significantly inhibited by POA. Taken together, these results suggest M. tuberculosis
Rv2783 as a possible cellular target of POA. Our findings thus have implications for a better
understanding of this unique sterilizing drug and for the design of new drugs targeting M.
tuberculosis persisters for improved treatment.