Learning epigenetic regulation from mycobacteria

Microb Cell. 2016 Jan 18;3(2):92-94. doi: 10.15698/mic2016.02.480.

Abstract

In a eukaryotic cell, the transcriptional fate of a gene is determined by the profile of the epigenetic modifications it is associated with and the conformation it adopts within the chromatin. Therefore, the function that a cell performs is dictated by the sum total of the chromatin organization and the associated epigenetic modifications of each individual gene in the genome (epigenome). As the function of a cell during development and differentiation is determined by its microenvironment, any factor that can alter this microenvironment should be able to alter the epigenome of a cell. In the study published in Nature Communications (Yaseen 2015 Nature Communications 6:8922 doi: 10.1038/ncomms9922), we show that pathogenic Mycobacterium tuberculosis has evolved strategies to exploit this pliability of the host epigenome for its own survival. We describe the identification of a methyltransferase from M. tuberculosis that functions to modulate the host epigenome by methylating a novel, non-canonical arginine, H3R42 in histone H3. In another study, we showed that the mycobacterial protein Rv2966c methylates cytosines present in non-CpG context within host genomic DNA upon infection. Proteins with ability to directly methylate host histones H3 at a novel lysine residue (H3K14) has also been identified from Legionella pnemophilia (RomA). All these studies indicate the use of non-canonical epigenetic mechanisms by pathogenic bacteria to hijack the host transcriptional machinery.

Keywords: DNA methylation; H3R42; Mycobacterium tuberculosis; Rv1988; Rv2966c; epigenetics; histone arginine methylation.

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Grants and funding

GS and IY are Senior Research Fellows of the Council of Scientific and Industrial Research (CSIR), India and University Grants Commission (UGC), India respectively in pursuit of a PhD of the Manipal University. This study was supported by funds from CDFD and a grant from Department of Biotechnology, Government of India to SK.