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Journal of Bacteriology, January 2000, p. 264-271, Vol. 182, No. 2
Department of Biological Sciences, University
of Hull, Hull HU6 7RX, United Kingdom
Received 29 June 1999/Accepted 26 October 1999
The role of salicylic acid in iron metabolism was examined in two
wild-type strains (mc2155 and NCIMB 8548) and three mutant
strains (mc21292 [lacking exochelin], SM3 [lacking
iron-dependent repressor protein IdeR] and S99 [a
salicylate-requiring auxotroph derived in this study]) of
Mycobacterium smegmatis. Synthesis of salicylate in SM3 was
derepressed even in the presence of iron, as was synthesis of the
siderophores exochelin, mycobactin, and carboxymycobactin. S99 was
dependent on salicylate for growth and failed to grow with the three
ferrisiderophores, suggesting that salicylate fulfills an additional
function(s) other than being a precursor of mycobactin and
carboxymycobactin. Salicylic acid at 100 µg/ml repressed the formation of a 29-kDa cell envelope protein (putative exochelin receptor protein) in S99 grown both iron deficiently and iron sufficiently. In contrast, synthesis of this protein was affected only
under iron-limited conditions in the parent strain, mc2155,
and remained unaltered in SM3, suggesting an interaction between the
IdeR protein and salicylate. Thus, salicylate may also function as a
signal molecule for recognition of cellular iron status. Growth of all
strains and mutants with p-aminosalicylate (PAS) at 100 µg/ml increased salicylate accumulation between three- and eightfold
under both iron-limited and iron-sufficient growth conditions and
decreased mycobactin accumulation by 40 to 80% but increased
carboxymycobactin accumulation by 50 to 55%. Thus, although PAS
inhibited salicylate conversion to mycobactin, presumptively by
blocking salicylate AMP kinase, PAS also interferes with the additional
functions of salicylate, as its effect was heightened in S99 when the
salicylate concentration was minimal.
0021-9193/00/$04.00+0
Copyright © 2000, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Mutational Analysis of a Role for Salicylic Acid in
Iron Metabolism of Mycobacterium smegmatis
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Department of
Biological Sciences, University of Hull, Hull HU6 7RX, United Kingdom. Phone: 44-1482-465243. Fax: 44-1482-465458. E-mail:
c.ratledge{at}biosci.hull.ac.uk.
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