TY - JOUR
T1 - Leucine auxotrophy restricts growth of Mycobacterium bovis BCG in macrophages
AU - Bange, Franz Christoph
AU - Brown, Amanda M.
AU - Jacobs, William R.
PY - 1996
Y1 - 1996
N2 - The ability of slow-growing mycobacteria to replicate within host mononuclear phagocytes is thought to be central to the pathogenesis of mycobacterial infection. However, because of the lack of a mycobacterial mutant defective for intracellular replication, it has not been possible to test this hypothesis directly. Previously, we showed that a BCG leucine auxotroph with a transposon disruption of the leuD gene is unable to grow in mice. Here we demonstrate that this mutant is also incapable of replicating within cultured macrophages in vitro. Complementation of the leuD mutation with the leuCD genes of Escherichia coli restored wild-type levels of growth in macrophages, establishing that the defect for intracellular replication was due to leucine auxotrophy per se and not to a polar effect of the transposon insertion on an adjacent gene. These results suggest that the inability of the leucine auxotroph to grow in mice was due to its sequestration, after phagocytosis, in an intracellular compartment from which it could not obtain leucine.
AB - The ability of slow-growing mycobacteria to replicate within host mononuclear phagocytes is thought to be central to the pathogenesis of mycobacterial infection. However, because of the lack of a mycobacterial mutant defective for intracellular replication, it has not been possible to test this hypothesis directly. Previously, we showed that a BCG leucine auxotroph with a transposon disruption of the leuD gene is unable to grow in mice. Here we demonstrate that this mutant is also incapable of replicating within cultured macrophages in vitro. Complementation of the leuD mutation with the leuCD genes of Escherichia coli restored wild-type levels of growth in macrophages, establishing that the defect for intracellular replication was due to leucine auxotrophy per se and not to a polar effect of the transposon insertion on an adjacent gene. These results suggest that the inability of the leucine auxotroph to grow in mice was due to its sequestration, after phagocytosis, in an intracellular compartment from which it could not obtain leucine.
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U2 - 10.1128/iai.64.5.1794-1799.1996
DO - 10.1128/iai.64.5.1794-1799.1996
M3 - Article
C2 - 8613393
AN - SCOPUS:0029944435
SN - 0019-9567
VL - 64
SP - 1794
EP - 1799
JO - Infection and immunity
JF - Infection and immunity
IS - 5
ER -