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Abstract
Reconstructing the evolutionary origins of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, the causative agent of human tuberculosis, has helped identify bacterial factors that have led to the tubercle bacillus becoming such a formidable human pathogen. Here we report the discovery and detailed characterization of an exceedingly slow growing mycobacterium that is closely related to M. tuberculosis for which we have proposed the species name Mycobacterium spongiae sp. nov., (strain ID: FSD4b-SM). The bacterium was isolated from a marine sponge, taken from the waters of the Great Barrier Reef in Queensland, Australia. Comparative genomics revealed that, after the opportunistic human pathogen Mycobacterium decipiens, M. spongiae is the most closely related species to the M. tuberculosis complex reported to date, with 80% shared average nucleotide identity and extensive conservation of key M. tuberculosis virulence factors, including intact ESX secretion systems and associated effectors. Proteomic and lipidomic analyses showed that these conserved systems are functional in FSD4b-SM, but that it also produces cell wall lipids not previously reported in mycobacteria. We investigated the virulence potential of FSD4b-SM in mice and found that, while the bacteria persist in lungs for 56 days after intranasal infection, no overt pathology was detected. The similarities with M. tuberculosis, together with its lack of virulence, motivated us to investigate the potential of FSD4b-SM as a vaccine strain and as a genetic donor of the ESX-1 genetic locus to improve BCG immunogenicity. However, neither of these approaches resulted in superior protection against M. tuberculosis challenge compared to BCG vaccination alone. The discovery of M. spongiae adds to our understanding of the emergence of the M. tuberculosis complex and it will be another useful resource to refine our understanding of the factors that shaped the evolution and pathogenesis of M. tuberculosis.
Author summary
Tuberculosis, caused by Mycobacterium tuberculosis, is still one of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases. However, the origins and rise of M. tuberculosis as a successful pathogen are not well understood. Here, we report the isolation and characterisation of a marine sponge-derived mycobacterium (M. spongiae) from the Great Barrier Reef that has striking genotypic similarity to M. tuberculosis, with 80% average nucleotide identity. We further show by proteomic and lipidomic analyses that M. spongiae shares virulence factors and unique cell wall lipids with the tubercle bacillus. In spite of these conserved genotypic and phenotypic features, M. spongiae was not virulent in a mouse model of infection, leading us to investigate its potential as a vaccine strain or genetic donor for enhancing the current BCG vaccine for tuberculosis. Our findings contribute to understanding the evolutionary origins of M. tuberculosis and provide further insights into its pathogenesis.
Citation: Pidot SJ, Klatt S, Ates LS, Frigui W, Sayes F, Majlessi L, et al. (2024) Marine sponge microbe provides insights into evolution and virulence of the tubercle bacillus. PLoS Pathog 20(8): e1012440. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440
Editor: Thomas Hawn, University of Washington, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Received: April 30, 2024; Accepted: July 22, 2024; Published: August 29, 2024
Copyright: © 2024 Pidot et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Data Availability: The M. spongiae genome sequence is available at Genbank with the accession CP046600. All other relevant data are within the manuscript and its Supporting Information files.
Funding: This project was supported by a National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Ideas grant (GNT2021638) to S.J.P, a NHMRC L2 Fellowship to T.P.S., and NHMRC Project Grant (GNT1105522) to T.P.S. and S.J.P., an Agence Nationale pour la Recherche grant (ANR-10-LABX-62-IBEID) to RB and an Australian Research Council (ARC) Linkage project (LP0882233) to J.A.F. H.I. was supported by a University of Queensland Research Scholarship (UQRS) and University of Queensland International Research Tuition Award (UQIRTA). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
Introduction
M. tuberculosis, the causative agent of human tuberculosis (TB), is the leading bacterial cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide and is responsible for approximately 1.5 million deaths per year [1]. Tuberculosis has affected humans since at least the neolithic expansion of humans across the continents. Despite the wealth of molecular evidence explaining the evolution of mycobacteria that cause tuberculosis in humans and other mammals (the Mycobacterium canettii clade and M. tuberculosis complex, MTBC), the origins of this complex and their differentiation from other mycobacteria are only beginning to be understood.
Several environmental mycobacteria have also been noted as close ancestors of the MTBC, including Mycobacterium marinum, a fish and human pathogen [2], and Mycobacterium kansasii [3], although neither of these mycobacteria have been seen to transmit between humans and they have significantly larger genomes than M. tuberculosis. Recent genomic analyses have identified some other opportunistic human pathogens, such as Mycobacterium riyhadense, Mycobacterium lacus, Mycobacterium shinjukense and Mycobacterium decipiens, that share many features of host-adaptation with M. tuberculosis [4]. However, these closely related, slow growing non-tuberculous mycobacteria (NTM) bacteria differ in many aspects from tuberculosis-causing mycobacteria. These studies suggest that there are likely other taxa to discover that can aid our understanding of M. tuberculosis evolution from a generalist mycobacterium into a highly virulent, specialist human pathogen.
Marine sponges are known to house a large and diverse repertoire of bacteria, as attested by recent efforts to catalogue the microbiome of these animals from around the world [5–7]. These studies have shown that Actinobacteria are one of the largest phyla within these microbial communities. As part of efforts to identify and catalogue Actinobacterial symbionts from marine sponges on the Great Barrier Reef in Australia, and to identify possible target species of anti-mycobacterial rifamycins produced by Salinospora sponge symbionts, a mycobacterial isolate named FSD4b-SM was isolated from a Fascaplysinopsis reticulata sponge at a depth of 25m [8]. Initial investigations of this strain showed that it was closely related to the MTBC by conserved gene amplicon sequencing [8].
Here, we sought to better understand the genetic and functional relationships between FSD4b-SM and the MTBC through genomic, proteomic and lipidomic analyses. Our research establishes FSD4b-SM as the most closely related marine organism to the MTBC, assesses its virulence potential, and its prospects for use in TB vaccine development.
Results and discussion
General characterisation of Mycobacterium spongiae FSD4b-SM
We first performed general phenotypic analyses of M. spongiae FSD4b-SM that showed it was capable of growth on solid media typically used for culturing heterotrophic marine bacteria, although colony formation was scant (Fig 1A). FSD4b-SM did not grow on media typically used for mycobacterial growth, such as Lowenstein-Jensen or egg-yolk-based agar media. An analysis of growth performed in simplified marine broth, showed that FSD4b-SM grew optimally at 28°C with an estimated doubling time of 64 days and reached stationary phase after approximately three months (Fig 1B). FSD4b-SM was unable to grow at 37°C. The bacteria stained acid-fast, forming short, compact rods (Fig 1C). Transmission electron microscopy confirmed rod-shaped cells, approx. 2 μM in length and 0.4 μM in diameter (Fig 1D).
A) Representative example of scant M. spongiae growth on simplified marine agar. B) Growth curve of M. spongiae in simplified marine broth. Each point is an average of measurements taken from three biological replicates (S2 Table). C) Ziehl-Neelsen stained M. spongiae cells. D) Electron micrograph of M. spongiae cells (x 33,000 magnification).
Comparative genomics of Mycobacterium spongiae FSD4b-SM with other mycobacteria
Comparative genomics between related mycobacteria has provided significant insights into the factors that make M. tuberculosis pathogenic. Previous work using partial, concatenated 16S rRNA, hsp65 and rpoB gene sequences from FSD4b-SM showed that it was closely related to the MTBC [8]. To gain greater insight into the relationship between FSD4b-SM, the MTBC and other mycobacterial species, we first completed a high-quality, closed FSD4b-SM genome using a combination of Illumina and PacBio sequencing. FSD4b-SM has a single circular 5,581,157 bp chromosome, harbouring 4458 coding sequences (CDS) (134 predicted pseudogenes) and a single rRNA locus. The average GC percentage was 65.56%. Initial comparisons of genome size showed that the FSD4b-SM genome is 1.1 Mb larger than the M. tuberculosis H37Rv genome (4.4Mb) [9,10], but smaller than other close M. tuberculosis relatives, such as Mycobacterium kansasii (6.4 Mb) [11] and Mycobacterium marinum (6.6 Mb) [2].
To explore the relationship between FSD4b-SM and other mycobacteria more thoroughly, we calculated pairwise average nucleotide identity (ANI) with M. tuberculosis and eight other mycobacterial species known to be closely related to the MTBC (Fig 2A). This analysis compares nucleotide identity between two genomes, with FSD4b-SM clustering most closely with M. decipiens and the MTBC (represented by M. tuberculosis and M. canettii) (approx. 80% ANI) (Fig 2A). However, the overall ANI differences between all 10 mycobacterial genomes were minimal and cluster resolution was subsequently low (Fig 2A). To improve resolution and gain greater insight into evolutionary relationships between FSD4b-SM, the MTBC and other mycobacteria we inferred a phylogeny among the same 10 mycobacteria and included an additional 20 comparator mycobacterial genomes (Fig 2B) [4]. We built a maximum-likelihood phylogeny from amino acid sequence alignments of 107 essential, single-copy core CDS that are found in the majority of bacteria [12]. This analysis showed that among all 30 mycobacterial genomes FSD4b-SM clusters with Mycobacterium decipiens and the MTBC, within a group of mycobacteria previously defined as the M. tuberculosis-associated phylotype (MTBAP) and consistent with the ANI results (Fig 2B) [4]. The relatively long branch length of FSD4b-SM within the MTBAP cluster supports the classification of this mycobacterium as a distinct species (Fig 2B). To delve further into the relationship between M. tuberculosis and FSD4b-SM, we more closely assessed core genome differences between these two mycobacteria and the genomes from three other key mycobacterial species (M. kansasii, M. marinum, and M. decipiens) (Fig 2C). The five species shared a core genome of 1815 CDS, with FSD4b-SM sharing more than 50% of its CDS content with M. marinum, despite being more distantly related at the nucleotide level (Fig 2C). However, M. spongiae and M. tuberculosis also share approximately 55% of their coding capacity (c.f. M. tuberculosis and M. marinum, which also share 55% coding capacity); it is notable that a mammalian host-restricted pathogen like M. tuberculosis shares much of its protein coding capacity with marine mycobacteria. Overall chromosome architecture is well conserved between FSD4b-SM and the closely related species, but there are also several regions spanning approximately 500kb in total of the FSD4b-SM genome that are distinct to the sponge mycobacterium (Fig 2D and 2E). Upon further investigation it was noted that several of these distinct regions harboured large gene clusters encoding putative polyketide synthase (PKS) or non-ribosomal synthetase (NRPS) enzymes. These enzymes are involved in the production of specialised metabolites in bacteria and fungi, including many well-known bioactive molecules, such as antibiotics and anticancer compounds [13]. To assess these PKS- and NRPS-encoding regions further, we utilised the bioinformatic tool antiSMASH to predict regions of the genome likely to be involved in specialised metabolism [14]. This analysis identified 19 regions of DNA predicted to be encode proteins involved in specialised metabolism in the FSD4b-SM genome. As PKSs are heavily involved in the biosynthesis of core mycobacterial lipids, such as the mycoketides, phthiocerol dimycocerosates and mycolic acids (discussed in detail below), the majority of these 19 regions are well conserved across a range of mycobacteria. The FSD4b-SM genome also encodes an orthologous NRPS locus for the production of isonitrile lipopeptides (INLPs) (F6B93_01120–01155), which are used by M. tuberculosis and other pathogenic mycobacteria for metal transport [15]. However, five of these 19 specialised metabolite loci appear to be specific to FSD4b-SM, corresponding to a total of 315 kb of DNA. These include a hybrid PKS-NRPS locus that has greater homology to PKS-NRPS systems from algae than those from other mycobacteria (F6B93_00330 –F6B93_00460); a putative alkylresorcinol locus (F6B93_10605 –F6B93_10760), that are known to produce molecules with antioxidant, cytotoxic or also have signalling properties [16]; and three further PKS-encoding regions (F6B93_18505 –F6B93_18675, F6B93_19200 –F6B93_19380, F6B93_21085 –F6B93_21320) with unknown predicted products. At present it is not possible to predict the final molecular structures of a given PKS from genome sequence information alone, meaning that these regions await the identification of their ultimate chemical entities.
A) Pairwise average nucleotide identity (%ANI) between related Mycobacterium species. B) Maximum-likelihood phylogenetic tree (iqtree) with 1000 bootstrap iterations, inferred among 30 mycobacteria and based on amino acid sequence alignments from 107 conserved bacterial genes (bcgTree). M. smegmatis was used as an outgroup to root the phylogeny. Asterisk indicates node with >60% bootstrap node support. All other tree nodes had greater than 90% bootstrap support. MTBC encircled. Red branch length denotes M. spongiae FSD4b-SM placement. C) Upset plot showing shared coding sequences (CDS) at the 80% amino acid identity level between five related mycobacteria (Roary). D) Circos plot showing DNA sequence homology (Blastn) among M. spongiae and closely related species. Regions on the outermost ring represent the length of each individual genome, grey shading on the next innermost ring shows regions that are unique to M. spongiae among these comparator genomes. Links from the M. spongiae genome to other genomes show relative positions of regions encoding orthologues with >80% amino acid similarity. Link colours correspond to the colour of each genome on the outermost ring. E) Artemis Comparison Tool (ACT) plot showing comparative chromosome architecture and length between M. spongiae, M. marinum and M. tuberculosis. Links between the sequences denote regions with >75% nucleotide identity, with red links indicating the same DNA orientation, while blue links indicate inverse orientation with respect to each genome.
Overview of shared M. spongiae and M. tuberculosis genetic features
Given the high level of genetic similarity and shared protein orthologues between M. spongiae and the MTBC, we sought to identify the presence of known M. tuberculosis pathogenesis factors in the FSD4b-SM genome. The M. tuberculosis antigens MPT83, TB8.4, antigen 85 complex, ESAT-6 and CFP-10, were all identified in the M. spongiae genome with >78% amino acid identity (S5 Table). All four mammalian cell entry (Mce) families present in M. tuberculosis are conserved in gene content and synteny in FSD4b-SM, as well as a distinct mce locus not found in either M. tuberculosis or M. marinum (F6B93_18965 to F6B93_18990) [17] (S5 Table). Other conserved pathogenic factors include the ESX secretion systems and a range of key mycobacterial lipid species (both discussed in detail below). Conserved regulatory systems include the PhoPR virulence regulatory system [18,19] and several TetR-family regulators involved in M. tuberculosis antibiotic resistance such as EthR (and the associated monooxygenase EthA linked to ethionamide resistance), InhR (isoniazid) and EtbR (isoniazid and ethambutol) [20].
In M. tuberculosis the DosS-DosT/DosR (DevST/R) regulatory system controls approximately 50 CDS involved in responses to carbon monoxide (CO) and nitric oxide (NO) exposure [21]. In FSD4b-SM a DosR ortholog exists (F6B93_06220), while F6B93_12710 is a putative sensor kinase most closely related to the M. tuberulcosis hypoxia sensor DosT (76% amino acid identity). A DosS orthologue appears absent in FSD4b-SM suggesting an inability to sense redox signals in the same way as M. tuberculosis [22]. Other M. tuberculosis pathogenic determinants that are not well conserved in FSD4b-SM include a sphingomyelinase (encoded by Rv0888) that is used to degrade the major eukaryotic lipid sphingomyelin, and the M. tuberculosis outer-membrane channel protein and necrotizing exotoxin CpnT (Rv3903c), whose orthologue in FSD4b-SM (F6B93_13125) shares only 56% aa identity with only the NAD+-glycohydrolase domain of Rv3903c [23–25].
The MTBC has more than 80 toxin-antitoxin (TA) systems, important for bacterial persistence within the host. FSD4b-SM has a smaller and distinct toxin-antitoxin repertoire compared to the MTBC, with only 11 type II TA systems (F6B93_: 00510/00515, 00780/00785, 03975, 12335, 12350, 12355/12360, 13370/13375, 14995/15000, 15135, 18675/18680, 19810/19815). There are also no plasmids, phage or other insertion sequence elements in the FSD4b-SM genome in contrast to M. tuberculosis where mobile elements make up 3.4% of its genome [26]. The absence of mobile DNA is also in contrast to the plasmids and prophage that appear in strains of M. marinum and M. kansasii [2,3]. This suggests that foreign DNA uptake has been restricted in FSD4b-SM. The FSD4b-SM genome contains a number of antibiotic resistance determinants (such as RbpA and aminoglycoside 2’-N-acetyltransferase) that are also present in M. tuberculosis [27,28], inferring that these determinants are ancestral to this lineage of mycobacteria.
DNA methylation in FSD4b
The absence of prophage, insertion sequence elements and plasmids suggest strong barriers in FSD4b-SM to extracellular DNA acquisition. DNA restriction modification is one possible barrier, so we took advantage of the PacBio sequence data to explore adenine DNA methylation patterns in this mycobacterium. We observed three different methylated motifs, two previously reported in M. tuberculosis, including the highly methylated CTCAG/CTGGAG motif (2582/2592 sites), and GTAYN4ATC (538/565 sites) (S6 Table) [29]. A third FSD4b-SM motif AGCN5CTTC/GAAGN5GCT (624/625 sites) is different to the third M. tuberculosis motif (S6 Table). Interestingly, all three motifs had near complete methylation, suggesting efficient methylases working with their cognate (and presumably highly active) restriction modification systems.
FSD4b-SM energetics
There is extensive conservation in FSD4b-SM with M. tuberculosis CDS encoding key proteins required for respiration and ATP synthesis, with CDS encoding all key proteins associated with the mycobacterial electron transport chain and the F1Fo ATP synthase present and intact (S1 Fig). However, like other mycobacteria outside the MTBC, a specific fumarate reductase complex (FrdABCD) is absent in M. spongiae. Also, the single nitrate reductase locus nar (F6B93_02320—F6B93_02360) is distinct to that found in M. tuberculosis. The M. tuberculosis hyc hydrogenase locus encoding a purported formate hydrogenylase enzyme complex is also absent in FSD4b-SM [30]. M. spongiae instead carries a locus encoding a group 1h hydrogenase complex (F6B93_RS07495—F6B93_RS07595), orthologous to the hhy locus in M. smegmatis [31]. This complex is presumably used by FSD4b-SM to oxidize molecular hydrogen that is abundant in seawater [32,33].
ESX systems
ESX (or type VII) secretion systems allow mycobacteria to export virulence determinants and other substrates across their specialized cell envelope. Most pathogenic mycobacteria contain up to five of these ESX systems, which are believed to have evolved by horizontal transfer and gene duplication events [34]. The best studied of these systems is ESX-1, which is used by M. tuberculosis to permeabilize the phagolysosome and is also responsible for the processing and secretion of two key virulence determinants, CFP-10 (esxB) and ESAT-6 (esxA). All components of ESX-1 are highly conserved in FSD4b-SM, including CFP-10 and ESAT-6 orthologues (S2 Fig and S7 Table). Additionally, the FSD4b-SM ESX-1 locus contains a nine gene insertion that harbours novel PE and PPE encoding genes (S2 Fig). The four remaining ESX loci are all well conserved in the FSD4b-SM genome and include the components necessary for iron siderophore uptake (ESX-3, [35]) and for mycobacterial outer membrane permeability and nutrient uptake (ESX-5, [36]).
To investigate whether these ESX systems were functional in FSD4b-SM, we first performed secretion analysis followed by SDS-PAGE as well as Western blot analysis with an array of antibodies against M. tuberculosis proteins that are secreted by ESX-secretion systems or commonly used loading controls. While we were unable to detect any specific protein using SigA, GroEL, EsxN, EspA, EsxA (ESAT-6), EsxB (CFP-10), staining with an antibody against PE_PGRS proteins revealed that this group of proteins is highly expressed by FSD4b-SM (S3 Fig). High levels of the proteins were also detected in the culture filtrate. Compared to M. tuberculosis fractions the expression of PE_PGRS proteins appear at higher molecular weights, which is like M. marinum, another marine-associated mycobacterium [37,38].
To investigate expressed proteins in more detail, we performed proteomic analysis of cell free culture supernatants and whole cell lysates. These analyses confidently identified a total of 1354 expressed proteins, including several proteins of the ESX-1, ESX-2 and ESX-5 secretion systems (S7 Table). ESX-1 substrates and components detected included the major secreted M. tuberculosis antigen CFP-10 (F6B93_22245), the chaperone EspB (F6B93_22290), the PE protein chaperone EspG1 (F6B93_22210) and the ESX-1 secretion regulator EspI (F6B93_22255) [39–42]. The ESX-5 secretion system has been shown to be essential to slow growing mycobacteria [36,43] and several substrates of this system were detected, including a full-length version of the substrate EsxM (F6B93_11055), which has been suggested to promote tissue dissemination in ancestral M. tuberculosis lineages [44]. In addition, proteins constituting the building blocks of the ESX-5 secretion apparatus were also detected, including EccB5 (F6B93_11005), EccC5 (F6B93_11010), EccD5 (F6B93_11065) and EccE5 (F6B93_11075) (S7 Table) [45]. These results suggest a degree of conservation among type VII secretion systems and functionality between M. tuberculosis and the sponge mycobacterium.
PE/PPE proteins
In addition to substrates encoded within each ESX locus, each ESX system also secretes its own array of PE/PPE substrates, so named for the highly conserved Proline-Glutamate and Proline-Proline-Glutamate motifs present in their N-termini, respectively [46]. While PE/PPE proteins are found across both saprophytic and pathogenic mycobacteria, the latter generally harbour more of these proteins and in M. tuberculosis they are implicated in diverse phenotypes, including nutrient acquisition, and a range of pro- and anti-immunity responses [35,46–48]. Several M. tuberculosis PE/PPE proteins are essential for bacterial growth under a range of in vitro and in vivo conditions [49,50]. Examination of the FSD4b-SM genome identified 179 PE and 82 PPE genes (S8 Table) corresponding to over 10% of its coding capacity, compared to 99 PE and 69 PPE genes in M. tuberculosis (7% of the genome) [9,46]. This repertoire includes multiple members of the PE_PGRS and PE_MPTR subfamilies that are restricted to members of the MTBC [46,51] and is consistent with the expansion of PE/PPE family proteins in slow growing mycobacteria [52].
FSD4b-SM contains a number of orthologues to PE/PPE proteins reported to have important roles in M. tuberculosis growth including PPE4 (F6B93_02120) and its secretion partner PE5 (FB693_02115), that participate in mycobactin-mediated iron acquisition [35,53,54], PPE62 (F6B93_06010) involved in heme and hemoglobin utilisation [55], and PE19 (F6B93_11045) associated with stress resistance (S8 Table) [56]. Likewise, multiple M. tuberculosis PPEs that are involved in virulence have orthologues in M. spongiae including PPE25 (F6B93_11025), PPE26 (F6B93_11035), PPE27 (F6B93_04645), PPE68 (F6B93_22240) and PE35 (F6B93_11875) [57–59]. FSD4b-SM also possesses a number of PE/PPE proteins that have been positively linked to the secretion of type VII substrates, including PPE38 (F6B93_14895), which is essential for the secretion of PPE_MPTR and PE_PGRS proteins in the M. tuberculosis complex and M. marinum [60], and PE8 (F6B93_17700) and PPE15 (F6B93_17705) [36,61]. However, there are some potentially important differences too. For example, PE_PGRS47 (Rv2741), known to inhibit autophagy during M. tuberculosis infection, is absent from FSD4b-SM [62].
PE/PPE proteins that are involved in nutrient acquisition and stress resistance, such as PPE51 (F6B93_06205) and PE19 (F6B93_11045) are also present in FSD4b-SM with high levels of homology to their M. tuberculosis counterparts [56,63]. At least 29 of the putative FSD4b-SM PE/PPE proteins were confirmed to be expressed by proteomic analysis, including a LipY orthologue (F6B93_06345, LipY), which is involved in virulence in M. tuberculosis [64] (S8 Table). Overall, a large expansion of PE/PPE proteins, in particular those of the PE_PGRS and PPE-MPTR families, is seen in M. spongiae.
Unlike in M. tuberculosis, there are no IS element insertions associated with PE/PPE genes in FSD4b-SM, suggesting that the expansion of PE/PPE repertoire in this strain, relative to M. tuberculosis, has most likely occurred by gene duplication and homologous recombination [65,66]. Overall, the pattern of FSD4b-SM PE/PPE proteins follows that in other mycobacteria, with multiple, high-identity paralogues. The roles these PE/PPE proteins play in FSD4b-SM physiology remain to be discovered, but a role in protein export across the highly hydrophobic mycobacterial cell envelope is one candidate function [67].
Lipid biosynthesis pathways
The unique mycobacterial cell envelope is known to contain more than 50 classes of lipids and forms a barrier against many antibiotics and host immune defences. While mycolic acids make up approximately 30% of the outer layer of mycobacterial cells, other lipids such as the phthiocerol dimycocerosates (PDIMs) and phenolic glycolipids (PGLs) on the outer cell surface have important roles in pathogenicity and virulence [68]. Due to the importance of lipids in mycobacterial physiology and virulence, we undertook a genomic and lipidomic evaluation of lipid production in FSD4b-SM.
Lipid species that are conserved among all mycobacteria include the mycolic acids and mycocerosates. Multiple enzymes are involved in mycolic acid biosynthesis in mycobacteria and highly conserved orthologues of each, including those involved in methoxy and hydroxy mycolic acid production, were identified in the FSD4b-SM genome (S9 Table). Nearly all enzymes involved in mycolic acid biosynthesis were detected by our proteomic analysis, as were multiple mycolic acid species in our lipidomic analysis (Fig 3 and S9 and S10 Tables). Likewise, the key enzyme in mycocerosate biosynthesis, Mas (F6B93_07120 in FSD4b-SM), was also detected in FSD4b-SM by proteomics. Interestingly, FSD4b-SM Mas has higher amino acid similarity to M. marinum Mas than to M. tuberculosis Mas, including the presence of a conserved tryptophan within the enoylreductase (ER) domain [69], which leads to the production of 2 S configured methyl branches on mycocerosic acids, which have only previously been seen in M. marinum and M. ulcerans [70] (S11 Table).
A) MS/MS peak spot viewer of the M. spongiae extract in MS-DIAL showing retention time versus mass/charge ratio. Abundance (based on peak area) is shown as the colour of individual spots (blue = low, green = intermediate, orange = high abundance). Each lipid (sub)class is highlighted with a black circle. Note that not every spot within a circle belongs to the lipid (sub)class. B) Comparison of M. marinum and M. tuberculosis key membrane lipids with those predicted or detected from FSD4b-SM. The question mark above mycoketide for M. marinum indicates that the M. marinum genome contains a pks12 orthologue, but mycoketides have not been detected from M. marinum. AG: arabinogalactan; PG: peptidoglycan; PDIMs: phthiocerol dimycocerosates; PGLs: phenolic glycolipids; LOS: lipooligosaccharide.
Genes encoding enzymes that produce lipid molecules restricted to pathogenic mycobacteria were also found in the FSD4b-SM genome. These include genes for mannosyl-β-1-phosphomycoketides (pks12), which are key lipid antigens presented by human CD1c T-cells during M. tuberculosis infection, and genes involved in the M. tuberculosis-restricted acylated trehalose derivatives including di-, tri- and poly-acyl trehalose (DAT, TAT and PAT, respectively), albeit with some potential structural variation [71–73]. However, the putative DAT/TAT/PAT locus in FSD4b-SM is missing a critical FadD24 orthologue, which was found to be essential for both DAT and PAT formation in M. tuberculosis [74] (S4 Fig). DAT was not detected in our lipidomic analysis (S10 Table), although this absence may also be due to possible differences in the putative DAT enzymes in FSD4b-SM and M. tuberculosis (see S12 Table).
Genes for the production of the PDIMs were also identified, however, according to the biosynthetic logic (module and domain arrangement) of their producing polyketide synthases the FSD4b-SM enzymes should form unprecedented C9 D- and C11 L- configured phthiodiolone glycols in FSD4b-SM, in contrast to the L and D configuration seen in M. tuberculosis and the L and L configuration in M. marinum (S5 Fig and S11 Table). However, these isomeric forms cannot be distinguished by our current lipidomic method. Genes for the formation of PGLs, which are thought to contribute to the hypervirulence of certain M. tuberculosis lineages are absent from FSD4b-SM and correspondingly no PGLs or their precursors were detected in our lipidomic analysis (S10 Table). Key genes for sulfolipid production appear to be only partially conserved in FSD4b-SM, suggesting that they are unlikely to be produced (S12 Table).
Unlike pathogen-specific lipids, the highly antigenic lipooligosaccharides (LOS) have been detected from several slow growing mycobacterial saprophytes and pathogens, including M. canettii [23], but not in M. tuberculosis sensu stricto [75]. Strains that make LOS contain a conserved genetic locus analogous to the DAT locus that contains two pks genes (pks5 and pks5.1), FadD and Pap orthologues, as well as multiple glycosyltransferases (S12 Table) [76–78]. FSD4b-SM contains a LOS locus, which includes four pks5 paralogues, compared to two in other species, suggesting a longer acyl chain may be added to the trehalose core (S7 Fig). In addition, FSD4b-SM also contains genes that appear to add a rhamnose to the acylated tetra-glucose core, suggesting that a previously unseen LOS is produced. FSD4b-SM also contains highly conserved genetic loci for the siderophore mycobactin and a crt locus, which is responsible for the production of the pigment beta-carotene in M. marinum [79] and M. kansasii [3]. Lipidomic analysis detected the presence of the related isoprenoid pigment zeaxanthin in FSD4b-SM extracts (S9 Table) and although zeaxanthin has not previously been detected from mycobacteria, it is known to be produced by many sea sponge-symbiotic bacteria [80,81], where the pigment is believed to act as an antioxidant and protect sponges from UV-induced damage [81]. These genomic, proteomic and metabolomic analyses of M. spongiae show that while its profile is distinct, it also has multiple features in common with M. tuberculosis as well as environmental opportunistic mycobacterial pathogens (Fig 3).
Assessment of FSD4b-SM pathogenicity and its potential as a M. tuberculosis vaccine strain
At present, M. bovis BCG is the only licensed anti-tuberculosis vaccine that provides good protection against childhood forms of tuberculosis, but it is less efficient in protecting against pulmonary tuberculosis in adolescents and adults [82]. A key reason for M. bovis BCG attenuation is the partial deletion of the ESX-1 locus and lack of major antigen ESAT-6 [83,84]. Early studies seeking to improve BCG by adding M. tuberculosis ESX-1 saw improved protection, but also increased virulence [84,85]. However, vaccine development using a rationally attenuated M. tuberculosis strain that still expresses ESAT-6 and CFP-10 showed increased protection relative to BCG, as did a recombinant BCG expressing the ESX-1 locus from the closely related M. marinum [42,86]. These studies are supported by a comprehensive analysis of recombinant BCG vaccines, which revealed that expression of ESX-1 derived effectors was an efficient way to improve BCG-induced immune responses [87]. As the FSD4b-SM ESX-1 locus is more closely related to that from M. tuberculosis than M. marinum, we sought to investigate if M. bovis BCG carrying ESX-1FSD4b-SM, or alternatively M. spongiae FSD4b-SM itself, would provide improved protection compared with BCG against M. tuberculosis aerosol challenge in the murine infection model.
To construct a recombinant BCG strain expressing ESX-1FSD4b-SM we used TAR cloning [88] to assemble the ESX-1 locus from eight overlapping PCR fragments in a yeast-E. coli shuttle vector and then subclone this region into the mycobacterial integrative vector pYUB412. Sequence analysis confirmed that the cloned region was identical to that from FSD4b-SM and this construct was integrated into M. bovis BCG at the phage L5 attB site. We then performed western blot analysis using ESAT-6 and CFP-10 specific antibodies. Only CFP-10 was detected in culture supernatants, a phenomenon observed with other recombinant BCG:ESX-1 expression systems [42]. These experiments suggest that the ESX-1FSD4b-SM was functional (Fig 4).
A) The FSD4b-SM ESX-1 locus was assembled from eight overlapping PCR products in a yeast-E.coli shuttle vector in Saccharomyces cerevisiae, followed by transfer and sub-cloning of the ESX-1 locus into a mycobacterial integrative vector in E. coli and subsequent transfer and integration into the M. bovis BCG chromosome. B) Western blot with anti-CFP-10 antibody showing detection of CFP-10FSD4b-SM from recombinant M. bovis BCG:ESX-1FSD4b-SM and M. tuberculosis H37Rv CFP-10, but not from empty vector containing M. bovis BCG:pYUB412. BCG:ESX-1FSD4b-SM 1 and 2 are two independent M. bovis BCG transformants. C) Establishment of a qPCR assay for detection of M. spongiae in mouse lung tissue. D) Mouse lung bacterial burden following intranasal inoculation of C57BL6 wild type mice with live M. spongiae. Shown are mean and SD at days 1, 7 and 56 post-infection (PI). Three mice were sacrificed at each time point and qPCR reactions were performed in technical triplicates. E) Vaccination trial using M. tuberculosis H37Rv infectious aerosol challenge. Mice were vaccinated intranasally with M. spongiae FSD4b-SM or either intranasally or subcutaneously with M. bovis BCG (BCG vax), or recombinant M. bovis BCG expressing ESX-1 from M. spongiae (rBCG::ESX-1FSD) and lungs were assayed for M. tuberculosis cells 4 weeks post challenge. Three mice were sacrificed in each group and M. tuberculosis counts were performed in duplicate. IN, intranasal; SC, subcutaneous.
With a CFP-10-expressing recombinant BCG in hand, we next sought to investigate whether this strain would improve protection against M. tuberculosis challenge in a murine infection model. We also sought to investigate whether live FSD4b-SM could be used as a potential vaccine candidate, as has been seen for other environmental mycobacteria [89]. Due to the slow growth of FSD4b-SM, we developed a qPCR assay to monitor FSD4b-SM growth in mice, assaying lungs from three mice at each time point. We performed both subcutaneous and intra-nasal vaccination routes. Interestingly, we observed M. spongiae FSD4b-SM persisted in the mouse lung for at least 8-weeks post inoculation (Fig 4D). At autopsy, mice did not show any signs of pathology.
Infectious challenge experiments with aerosolised M. tuberculosis H37Rv showed no protection was offered by an intranasal dose of live M. spongiae, as recovered M. tuberculosis CFUs per lung were similar to unvaccinated control mice (Fig 4E). Recombinant M. bovis BCG:ESX-1FSD4b-SM showed no further protection over the wild type M. bovis BCG vaccine, when delivered either subcutaneously or intranasally (Fig 4E). The CD4+ T cell response against immunogenic regions of EsxA is a good correlate of protection against M. tuberculosis in C57BL/6 (H-2b) mice [85]. We therefore explored the cross recognition of an EsxA:1–20 immunogenic region of M. bovis BCG:ESX-1FSD4b-SM by a T cell hybridoma specific to M. tuberculosis EsxA, restricted by major histocompatibility complex molecule-II, and representative of CD4+ effector T cells induced in vivo. A T cell hybridoma specific to Ag85A was used as a positive infection control (S8A–S8C Fig, top). Syngeneic DCs infected with recombinant M. bovis BCG:ESX-1FSD4b-SM and co-cultured with NB11 T cell hybridomas [90] detected no cross recognition of EsxA from M. bovis BCG:ESX-1FSD4b-SM (S8A–S8C Fig, middle), in accordance with the poor conservation of the immunodominant EsxA:1–20 epitope in M. spongiae FSD4b-SM (S8D Fig). However, as we also used an anti-EsxB T-cell hybridoma (XE12) that recognizes a 100% conserved EsxB region, restricted in the H-2K haplotype [90], which was unable to detect M. bovis BCG:ESX-1FSD4b-SM-infected DCs (S8A–S8C Fig, bottom), it is also possible that the EsxA and EsxB antigens from FSD4b-SM were not properly secreted by the recombinant BCG:ESX-1FSD4b-SM strain under the infection conditions used in the experiment and thus not recognized. This may also explain why the use of this BCG:ESX-1FSD4b-SM construct in vaccination experiments did not result in superior protection against M. tuberculosis challenge compared to BCG vaccination alone.
Conclusion
M. tuberculosis and the MTBC have co-existed with humans for millennia. Our knowledge of the evolutionary trajectory that transformed an environmental mycobacterium into a host-adapted mammalian pathogen is enriched every time a new mycobacterium related to the MTBC is discovered [2–4,91–94]. Genomic reconstructions indicate M. tuberculosis evolved from a common ancestor shared with several aquatic environment-associated mycobacteria, including M. marinum, M. kansasii and M. lacus [2,3]. Here we have shown that a mycobacterium isolated from a marine sponge, for which we have proposed the name Mycobacterium spongiae sp. nov. (“of the sponge”), occupies a phylogenetic position even closer to M. tuberculosis than these other mycobacteria, thus adding further support to the hypothesis that the MTBC might have evolved from a marine mycobacterium. It is also interesting to consider that while sponges are not like humans, human lungs are somewhat like sponges at both a gross mechano-anatomical level (they are both biological filters) and also perhaps more profoundly at a molecular evolutionary level, as exemplified by the discovery of a conserved TNF-driven fibrinogenic response to silica exposure in sponges, present also in mammals where it can lead to silicosis [95]. We don’t yet know anything of the interaction between M. spongiae, the host sponge from which it was isolated, Fascaplysinopsis reticulata, and its holobiont. Such interactions will be interesting to observe.
The close genetic relationship between FSD4b-SM and M. tuberculosis and functional similarities assessed by proteomics and lipidomics prompted us to examine whether FSD4b-SM was pathogenic in a mouse model. Given that 8-weeks post-infection with live M. spongiae there was no observable pathology, this suggests that M. spongiae is non-pathogenic towards mice. Furthermore, our data show an inability of M. spongiae to grow at 37°C in vitro and this suggests that M. spongiae cannot also not grow and divide in the mouse model. Given the long generation time of M. spongiae, we used qPCR to detect M. spongiae DNA in mouse organs as a surrogate for cell survival. While we observed a decrease in calculated genome equivalents over time (Fig 4D) we do not know at present whether this is due to extended DNA integrity or M. spongiae survival in a dormant state. Whatever the case, our data argue in favour of M. spongiae having low pathogenic potential in humans. Whether or not M. spongiae is a pathogen of aquatic animals remains to be seen and further experiments using models, such as zebrafish infection, are recommended.
In addition, we investigated whether components of M. spongiae could provide protection against M. tuberculosis challenge in a murine lung-infection model. While previous studies have shown that M. bovis BCG expressing M. marinum ESX-1 provided superior protection to BCG alone in mice [86], this was not the case for the ESX-1 locus from FSD4b-SM, despite the fact that the key ESX-1 antigens ESAT-6 and CFP-10 from FSD4b-SM are more closely related to M. tuberculosis than those from M. marinum, although we do not know how well the M. spongiae ESX-1 locus is expressed in M. bovis BCG during in vivo growth conditions in the mouse. Moreover, looking at the genomic comparison map of the ESX-1 loci from different mycobacterial species, we noted that the pe35 gene upstream of ppe68 is not present in M. spongiae (S2 Fig). In M. tuberculosis, this gene commonly plays an important role in effector function, as pe35 transposon mutants show ESAT-6 secretion defects and lower virulence [96,97] although in such transposon mutants a possible effect of the transposon insertion on downstream effect might also be an explanation for this phenotype. However, the T cell hybridoma experiments were consistent with ESX-1 effector secretion defects and also help explain the poor vaccination outcome. Finally, the ESX-1 region of M. spongiae contains several extra genes compared to the ESX-1 loci of other mycobacteria (S2 Fig), whose potential impact on the functionally of the heterologous ESX-1 locus integrated into the BCG genome is unknown.
Overall, we describe a fascinating example of a slow growing, likely non-pathogenic mycobacterium we have designated M. spongiae, that is closely related to M. tuberculosis, sharing multiple genetic and functional similarities with the deadly human pathogen, while being adapted to the environmental conditions that prevail at 25 meters under the sea. It is presently unknown whether M. spongiae parasitises the sponge or only uses this ecological niche for its extracellular proliferation, but our findings strengthen the hypothesis that slow growing mycobacteria show an extraordinary capacity for adaptation to specific environments, a feature that has certainly also helped the ancestor of the tuberculosis-causing mycobacteria to adapt to mammalian hosts and conquer intracellular milieux.
Description of Mycobacterium spongiae sp. nov
Mycobacterium spongiae (spon′gi.ae. L. gen. n. spongiae of a sponge, the source of the type strain).
Short, compact acid-fast staining rods approx. 2 μM in length and 0.4 μM in diameter. Capable of aerobic growth on solid media typically used for culturing heterotrophic marine bacteria, although colony formation is scant. Does not grow on media typically used for mycobacterial growth such as Lowenstein-Jensen or egg-yolk-based agar media. In a simplified marine broth (artificial seawater with 0.5% peptone, 0.1% yeast extract) grows optimally at 28°C with an estimated doubling time of 64 days and reaches stationary phase after approximately three months. Type strain is unable to grow at 37°C. Closely related to the MTBC (Mycobacterium tuberculosis complex) on the basis of 16S rRNA, hsp65 and rpoB gene sequences. The type strain has a 16S rRNA gene similarity value of 99.6% with Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The ANI (pairwise average nucleotide identity) between reference genomes is supportive of the status of a species adjacent to the MTBC. The relatively long branch length of the type strain within the M. tuberculosis-associated phylotype (MTBAP) cluster by phylogenetic analysis based on amino acid sequence comparisons of 107 genes also supports distinct species status. Key Mycobacterium tuberculosis virulence factors are present, including intact ESX secretion systems and associated effectors. The genome size and number of coding DNA sequences of the type strain was 5,581,157 bp and 4458 genes (134 predicted pseudogenes). There is a single rRNA locus. The average G+C percentage based on the genome was 65.56%.
The type strain is FSD4b-SM.
Materials and methods
Ethics statement
Animal procedures were reviewed and approved by The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research Animal Ethics Committee (ethics approval number 2017.016) and were conducted in accordance with the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act (1986) and the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Code of Practice for the Care and Use of Animals for Scientific Purposes (1997).
Culture conditions
M. spongiae was grown in simplified marine broth (5 g/L peptone, 1 g/L yeast extract, 33 g/L artificial sea salt). For growth on plates, simplified marine broth was supplemented with 10 g/L bacteriological agar (Difco). Cultures were incubated at 28°C for 2 to 3 months without shaking. A list of strains and plasmids used in this study can be found in S1 Table.
Growth curves
M. spongiae cultures were grown in 100 mL simplified marine broth at either 28°C or 37°C in biological triplicates. Cultures were started with a 1:100 dilution of a stationary phase M. spongiae culture. One milliliter samples were taken approximately every 2–3 weeks and optical density at 600nm was measured using an OD600 DiluPhotometer (Implen GmbH). Optical density readings are recorded in S2 Table.
Electron microscopy
Transmission electron microscopy was performed by first washing M. spongiae FSD4b-SM cells from 3 month old cultures in PBS and pelleting by centrifugation at 10,000 x g for 5 min. Cells were then resuspended in fixation buffer (2.5% glutaraldehyde in 0.1 M sodium cacodylate) and incubated for 2 h at RT. Cells were then pelleted by centrifugation and washed twice with 0.1 M sodium cacodylate before post-fixation in 1% osmium tetroxide for 2 h at RT. Cell pellets were then washed in dH2O, left overnight at 4°C in 0.3% uranyl acetate and then rinsed with dH2O before being dehydrated using a graded series of acetone. Samples were then infiltrated and embedded with EPON resin. Sections (70–80 nm thick) were cut and stained with uranyl acetate and lead citrate before being viewed under a Phillips CM120 transmission electron microscope at 120 Kv.
Genome sequencing
High molecular weight genomic DNA was prepared using the DNeasy Blood and Tissue kit (QIAgen), according to the manufacturer’s instruction for Gram positive bacteria. A complete FSD4b-SM genome sequence was generated using a combination of PacBio and Illumina sequencing. For sequencing on the PacBio RSII, extracted DNA was prepared using the Template Prep Kit 1.0 (PacBio) and following adapter ligation DNA was size selected using a BluePippin system (Sage Biosciences) with a 8 kb cut-off. Adapter-ligated, circularised DNA was loaded onto a single SMRT cell at 0.2 nM and sequence data were captured with a 6 h movie time. PacBio sequencing data was assembled using HGAP3, as implemented in the SMRT Portal (PacBio). The resulting genome was polished three times using Quiver (PacBio) before being error corrected with Illumina reads using Snippy v3.2 (https://github.com/tseemann/snippy). For Illumina sequencing, DNA libraries were created using the Nextera XT DNA preparation kit (Illumina) and whole genome sequencing was performed on the NextSeq platform (Illumina) with 2 x 150bp paired-end chemistry. A sequencing depth of >50× was targeted and the reads were used for error correcting the PacBio-assembled genome, as outlined above. The final 5,581,157 bp genome sequence was annotated using the NCBI Prokaryotic Genome Annotation Pipeline (PGAP) and assigned Genbank accession number CP046600.
Bioinformatics
Pairwise whole genome average nucleotide identity (ANI) was calculated using fastANI (https://github.com/ParBLiSS/FastANI) and ANIclustermap (https://github.com/moshi4/ANIclustermap) [98]. Core genome and ortholog comparisons were performed using bcgTree [12] and Roary [99]. Phylogenies were inferred using iqtree [100] using the the protein sequence alignment file output of bcgTree, with 1000 bootstrap replicates and the JTT model of amino acid substitution. A list of the mycobacterial genomes used for comparisons can be found in S3 Table. Individual protein homology searches were performed using BLAST, as implemented at NCBI (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/), with multiple amino acid sequence alignments performed with ClustalW [101] and phylogenetic trees built using the Geneious tree builder (Geneious v9.1) (https://www.geneious.com). Analysis and alignment of ESX loci with cblaster [102] and clinker [103] was performed using the online CompArative GEne Cluster Analysis Toolbox (cagecat.bioinformatics.nl). Alignments of other loci were performed with clinker [103] at cagecat.bioinformatics.nl. PE/PPE proteins were identified through homology searching using BLAST and via annotation describing the protein as either a PE or PPE family member. All putative M. spongiae PE/PPE proteins were then aligned against known PE/PPE proteins and investigated for the presence of key domains/signature sequences according to criteria in [52]. Analysis of specialised metabolism was performed with antiSMASH [14].
Extraction of and LC-MS analysis of mycobacterial lipids
Mycobacterial lipids were extracted and analysed as previously described [104]. In brief, cell pellets were extracted in 20 volumes of chloroform/methanol (2:1, v/v) followed by chloroform/methanol/water (1:2:0.8, v/v/v). Insoluble material was removed by centrifugation, extracts were dried under nitrogen and subjected to biphasic partitioning in 1-butanol and water (2:1, v/v). The organic phase was dried and lipids were resuspended in water-saturated 1-butanol. Lipid extracts were separated on an Agilent 1290 Infinity LC System (Agilent Technologies) using a Kinetex C 18 column (Phenomenex; 2.6 μm EVO C18 100Å) and eluted by using the following binary solvent system: mobile phase A (ACN:H2O (60:40, v/v) with 10 mM ammonium formate) and mobile phase B (IPA:ACN (90:10, vol/vol), with 10 mM ammonium formate), with a 30 min gradient program. Eluted lipids were detected using a 6550 iFunnel QTOF LC/MS system (Agilent Technologies) with the same parameters as previously described [104]. Lipids were identified in positive ionization mode by accurate mass, fragmentation pattern, retention time and retention time order (different lipid groups and different saturation levels show an elution time pattern and a relation to each other). MS-DIAL (Version 2.06; MS/MS data) was used for manual lipid annotation.
Proteomics
Samples for proteomics were prepared from FSD4B-SM cultures using the SP3 method [105]. Briefly, cells were lysed using buffer containing 50 mM HEPES, pH 8, 1% (wt/vol) SDS, 1% (vol/vol) Triton X-100, 1% (vol/vol) NP-40, 1% (vol/vol) Tween 20, 1% (wt/vol) deoxycholate, 5 mM EDTA, 50 mM NaCl, 1% (vol/vol) glycerol and beat beating for 6 x 30s in a Precellys 24 at speed 6.5. Insoluble material was removed by centrifugation at 20,000 x g for 10 min and the supernatant was transferred to a fresh tube. Protein concentration was measured using the BCA assay kit (Thermo Scientific) with bovine serum albumin as a standard. 10 μg protein was bound to SeraMag SpeedBeads Carobxylate-modified [E3] (Cytiva) and were digested overnight at 37°C with a 1:50 trypsin:protein ratio. Tryptic peptides were recovered and were cleaned up through SDB-RPS resin prior to submission for mass spectrometry.
The purified peptide samples were analysed via nano liquid chromatography coupled to tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) at the University of Melbourne Mass Spectrometry and Proteomics Facility, using an Orbitrap Eclipse Tribrid Mass Spectrometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA) equipped with a nano ESI interface coupled to an Ultimate 3000 nano HPLC (Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA). Peptides were separated using an Acclaim PepMap RSLC analytical column (C18, 100 Å, 75 μm × 50 cm, Thermo Fisher Scientific, USA) and Acclaim PepMap trap column (75 μm × 2 cm, C18, 100 Å). The enrichment column was injected with the tryptic peptides (3 μL) at an isocratic flow of 5 μL/min of 2% v/v CH3CN containing 0.05% v/v aqueous trifluoroacetic acid for 6 min, applied before the enrichment column was switched in-line with the analytical column. The eluents were 0.1% v/v aqueous formic acid and 5% v/v dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) (solvent A) and 0.1% v/v formic acid and 5% DMSO in acetonitrile (solvent B). The gradient was at 300 nL min-1 from (i) 0–6 min, 3% B; (ii) 6–35 min, 3–23% B; (iii) 35–45 min, 23–40% B; (iv) 45–50 min, 40–80% B; (v) 50–55 min, 80–80% B; (vi) 55–55.1 min, 80–3% B; (vii) 55.1–65 min, 3–3% B. The column oven was maintained at 50°C throughout the analysis. The Eclipse Orbitrap mass spectrometer was operated in the data-dependent mode, wherein full MS1 spectra were acquired in a positive mode over the range of m/z 375–1500, with spray voltage at 1.9kV, source temperature at 275°C, MS1 at 120,000 resolution and normalized AGC target of 100% and maximum ion injection time of 50 ms. The top 3 second method was used and selecting peptide ions with charge states of ≥ 2–7 and intensity thresholds of ≥ 5E4 were isolated for MS/MS. The isolation window was set at 1.6 m/z, and precursors were fragmented using higher energy C-trap dissociation (HCD) at a normalised collision energy of 30%, a resolution of 15,000, a normalized AGC target of 100% and automated IT time.
Protein fractionation and Western blotting of M. spongiae
M. spongiae FSD4B-SM liquid preculture of 25 ml was grown until an OD600 of 0.15 was reached. At this point the complete culture was added to fresh simplified marine broth to a total volume of 100 ml. The cultures were incubated for 14 days in standing conditions at 30°C. After the 14 days of incubation, the culture had reached a density of 0.203 OD600/ml. The culture was centrifuged in 2 x 50 ml falcon tubes at 5000 rpm for 10 minutes. The supernatant was taken and centrifuged again at 5000 rpm, after which the remaining supernatant (2 x 45ml) was collected and concentrated over a 3 kDa Amicon filter (Millipore). The residue was suspended in a volume of 900 μl. Pelleted cells after the first centrifugation step were washed once with PBS and resuspended in solubilisation buffer and boiled at 95°C for 15 minutes. An equivalent of 0.3 OD600 units of culture was loaded in each lane. Mycobacterium tuberculosis CDC1551 samples were loaded as a comparator. CDC1551 samples were taken from previously published protein fractions [106]. SDS-Page total protein content was imaged using standard Coomassie brilliant blue staining with Kaleidoscope molecular weight ladder (Biorad). Antibodies tested to visualize M. spongiae proteins included Anti-PGRS 7C4.1F7 [107] (Clone 7C4.1F7 was a kind gift from Michael J. Brennan, USA); polyclonal anti-SigA (Kind gift from I. Rosenkrands, Denmark); monoclonal ESAT-6 (hyb76-8) [108]; anti-GroEL2 antibody CS-44 (Kind gift from J. Belisle, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO); Rabbit polyclonal anti-EsxN (rMTb9.9A) [109].
TAR cloning of the M. spongiae ESX-1 region
To design primers for amplification of the FSD4b-SM ESX-1 locus, the region was divided into 8 theoretical fragments of approximately equivalent length. Primers were then designed so that each PCR fragment would overlap by at least 30bp of DNA (see S4 Table for primer sequences). DNA fragments were amplified using Phusion DNA polymerase (NEB) in reactions containing 10% DMSO and using GC buffer. The program for amplification was: 1 cycle of 95°C for 5’ then 30 cycles of 95°C for 10s, 72°C for 2 min 30s followed by a final extension at 72°C for 7 minutes. PCR products were cleaned up using AMPure XP beads (Beckman Coulter). The GeneArt High-Order Genetic Assembly kit (Thermo Fisher Scientific) was used to assemble the PCR products into the vector pYES1L by transformation into Saccharomyces cerevisiae MaV203 cells. The manufacturers protocols were followed for all steps. Recovered pYES1L:ESX-1FSD4b-SM DNA was sequenced using Illumina sequencing to confirm the correct sequence. The 33.3 kb ESX-1FSD4b-SM region from pYES1L:ESX-1FSD4b-SM was then subcloned by digestion with SbfI and gel extraction followed by ligation into the mycobacteria-E. coli shuttle vector pYUB412 that had been digested with SbfI. The resulting ligation mixture was transformed by electroporation into E. coli DH10B and colonies were screened by PCR for the presence of the ESX-1FSD4b-SM region. Cloning of the full-length ESX-1FSD4b-SM region was confirmed by restriction digestion. The resulting pYUB412:ESX-1FSD4b-SM plasmid was transformed into M. bovis BCG by electroporation according to standard protocols [110].
qPCR to estimate M. spongiae concentration in mouse tissues
A standard TaqMan assay was designed for quantitative, specific detection of M. spongiae in mouse tissue specimens. A PCR amplicon was designed spanning a 64bp region of F6B93_05840, a CDS encoding a hypothetical aquaporin protein. The primer sequences were: FSD4b_05840-F 5’- ACGTCAGGCTTGATGCTCTC-3’ and FSD4b_05840-R 5’- GCGCTACCAGATAGACCCAG—3’. The internal probe sequence was FSD4b_05840-P: 5’- [6FAM]CGGGTTTTTCTCGTGGAAGT[BHQ1] -3’. The qPCR was performed as described [111] using 2x SensiFast mastermix (Bioline) with primers and probes to a final concentration in 25uL reaction volume of 0.32uM (primers) and 0.16uM (probe) respectively. Each reaction included internal positive control reagents and DNA template with 2uL volume of sample template DNA. PCR cycles included 1x 95oC 5min followed by 45x 95oC for 10s and then 60°C for 20s. PCR was performed in a LC480 Lightcycler (Roche). A standard curve was prepared using 10-fold serial, replicate dilutions of M. spongiae purified genomic DNA. Genomic DNA concentrations were measured using fluorimetry (Qubit, Thermofisher).
Mouse vaccination and infectious challenge
Wild-type C57BL/6 mice were bred and maintained at The Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research Animal Facility. Intranasal and subcutaneous vaccinations were performed in 50 μL volumes in PBS containing either 104 CFU of live M. spongiae, or 5 x 104 CFU of the WT or BCG::ESX-1FSD4b-SM modified M. bovis BCG strains (the same dose was given for both intranasal and subcutaneous vaccination.
For M. tuberculosis infectious challenge, mice were infected with 50–200 colony-forming units (CFU) of M. tuberculosis H37Rv by aerosol using a whole-body Inhalation Exposure System (Glas-Col) four month after vaccination, as described [112]. A bacterial suspension containing ∼2.5x108 CFU in 6mL was aerosolized over a period of 45 min. Mice were euthanized four weeks post-infection by CO2 asphyxiation. Spleens and the right lung lobes were aseptically harvested and homogenized with steel beads in PBS+0.05% Tween-80 using a Bullet Blender (Next Advance) at setting #6 for 3 min (spleens) or #8 for 5 min (lungs). Tissue homogenates for counting M. tuberculosis were serially diluted and spread on 7H11 agar plates (BD Biosciences) supplemented with 0.5% glycerol and 10% (v/v) oleic-albumin-dextrose-catalase supplements (50 g/l BSA, 20 g/l dextrose, 0.04 g/l catalase and 0.5 g/l oleic acid [Sigma-Aldrich]). Plates were incubated at 37°C for 3 weeks before counting. M. spongiae DNA was extracted from mouse tissues using DNAeasy Blood and Tissue kit (Qiagen). The numbers of mice used in each individual experiment were calculated to permit detection of at least a two- to four-fold difference in bacterial loads between groups with 95% (two-sided) confidence and a power of 80%, based on prior experience.
For all experiments, mice were weighed daily and humane weight-based endpoints were set as weight loss >10% for more than 3 days. No mice were euthanized under these weight-based endpoints, and no mice lost >15% weight on any day.
Supporting information
S1 Table. Strains and plasmids used in this study.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s001
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S2 Table. OD600 measurements for M. spongiae growth curve at 28°C and 37°C.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s002
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S3 Table. Genomes used for phylogenetic analysis.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s003
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S4 Table. Primers used for construction of pYES1L:ESX-1FSD4b-SM.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s004
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S5 Table. M. tuberculosis virulence factors identified in M. spongiae genome.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s005
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S6 Table. DNA methylation patterns identified in the M. spongiae genome.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s006
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S7 Table. Orthologues of M. tuberculosis ESX system proteins in M. spongiae.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s007
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S8 Table. PE/PPE proteins identified in FSD4b-SM and M. tuberculosis PE/PPE orthologues.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s008
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S9 Table. Orthologues of mycolic acid biosynthesis proteins in M. spongiae.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s009
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S10 Table. Summary of key lipid species identified in M. spongiae.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s010
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S11 Table. Orthologues involved in the biosynthesis of phthiocerol dimycocerosates, phenolic glycolipids, and p-hydroxybenzoic acids.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s011
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S12 Table. Orthologues of proteins involved in biosynthesis of trehalose and related compounds.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s012
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S13 Table. Orthologues of proteins involved in the biosynthesis of phospholipids, isoprenoids and related compounds.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s013
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S1 Fig. Analysis of energetics from M. spongiae genome. Blue bars indicate conservation of a particular system with other mycobacteria, while red bars indicate absence of a particular system.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s014
(TIF)
S2 Fig. Alignment of ESX-1 and ESX-5 loci from M. spongiae FD4b-SM and other related mycobacteria. Pairwise percentage identity between encoded proteins is shown in white text, locus tags are written in black.
Common gene names for each the Esx proteins are coloured according to the gene on which they are encoded.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s015
(TIF)
S3 Fig. Exuberant expression of PE_PGRS proteins in M. spongiae.
(A) SDS-PAGE, Coomassie brilliant blue stained gel, showing protein loading for M. spongiae and M. tuberculosis. (B). Western blot analysis using anti-PE_PGRS antibody against M. spongiae and M. tuberculosis. WCL = Whole Cell Lysate. CF = Culture Filtrate.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s016
(TIF)
S4 Fig. Alignment of putative pks3/4 locus in M. spongiae with that from M. tuberculosis. PKS domains are indicated underneath each putative PKS protein.
Note the absence of a fadD24 orthologue in M. spongiae.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s017
(TIF)
S5 Fig. Predicted phthiodiolone diphthiocerante biosynthetic pathway in FSD4b-SM and comparison to phthiocerol dimycocerosate biosynthetic pathway in M. tuberculosis.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s018
(TIF)
S6 Fig. Alignment of pks7-11 region in M. tuberculosis with that from M. spongiae.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s019
(TIF)
S7 Fig. Alignment of putative LOS locus in M. spongiae with those from other mycobacteria. Note the four pks genes in the M. spongiae genome.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s020
(TIF)
S8 Fig. Assessment of recombinant M. bovis BCG FSD4b-SM Esx-1 protein effector T cell stimulation.
(A–D) Measurement of IL-2 production by T cell hybridomas specific for epitopes from M. tuberculosis H37Rv antigens Ag85A, EsxA, and EsxB, after co-culture with DCs: (A) infected with various M. bovis BCG recombinant ESX-1 strains, (B) infected with WT M. tuberculosis H37Rv or an ESX-1 deletion mutant, or (C) loaded with Ag85A, EsxA, and EsxB peptides encompassing the immunodominant epitopes or control peptide. Shown are concentrations of IL-2 in the co-culture supernatants at 24hr after T cell addition. Error bars are mean and SD of triplicate experiments. (D) Amino acid sequence alignments of M. spongiae FSD4b-SM Ag85A, EsxA and EsxB with M. tuberculosis H37Rv orthologs, showing conservation and differences with the T cell epitopes.
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1012440.s021
(TIF)
Acknowledgments
The authors wish to acknowledge the help of staff of the Mass Spectrometry facility at the Bio21 Institute, University of Melbourne.
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