Intercepting a Mycobacterial Biosynthetic Pathway with Covalent Labeling.

Publication date: Mar 24, 2025

The mycobacterial cell envelope plays both infectious and protective roles. Understanding its structure is crucial for unlocking the molecular basis underlying these functions. Studying glycans, the primary components of the cell envelope, is challenging due to their limited native functional handles for chemoselective modification. New labeling methods exploit biorthogonal chemistry, using small molecule mimics that intercept cellular metabolism or late-stage glycan biosynthesis. However, these strategies can have practical limitations, including probe delivery and effectiveness. An ideal small molecule probe should be easily deployed and exploit the critical enzyme-substrate relationships of natural substrates. To this end, we developed a “probegenic” strategy to label mycobacteria. Our approach eliminates the need for explicit substrate mimicry, as the relevant functionality is revealed by a target enzyme. Specifically, we synthesized an azide-substituted trans-β-lactone probe (AzLac), which adopts a substrate-like structure upon covalent enzyme labeling. This probe is incorporated by mycolyltransferases into a core mycobacterial cell envelope glycan, including in the pathogen Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Unlike other probes of the cell envelope, AzLac facilitates selective covalent labeling of the inner leaflet of the mycomembrane. Using Corynebacterium glutamicum mycolyltransferase deletion strains, we implicated Cmt2 as the primary mycolyltransferase target. We leveraged the ability to modify the cell envelope by demonstrating that AzLac could be used to attach a DNA barcode to mycobacteria, which would help track infection dynamics. Thus, we expect AzLac will be a valuable means of monitoring and tracking the mycobacterial cell envelope. Moreover, we anticipate masking and revealing recognition motifs in probes can be applied to diverse cellular targets.

Concepts Keywords
Biorthogonal Azlac
Corynebacterium Cellular
Envelope Covalent
Tuberculosis Envelope
Valuable Enzyme
Exploit
Glycan
Including
Labeling
Molecule
Mycobacterial
Primary
Probe
Small
Substrate

Semantics

Type Source Name
pathway REACTOME Metabolism
disease IDO pathogen
disease MESH infection

Original Article

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