Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, May 2001, p. 1317-1322, Vol. 45, No. 5
Department of Infection Biology,
Hans-Knöll-Institut für Naturstoff-Forschung e.V., D-07708
Jena, Germany
Received 28 November 2000/Returned for modification 5 January
2001/Accepted 12 February 2001
In order to establish a screening system for xenosiderophores which
can be utilized by mycobacteria, we generated a set of mutants of
Mycobacterium smegmatis that are blocked in different steps
of the well-known iron acquisition system. One mutant with a block in
mycobactin biosynthesis was generated from strain mc2155 by
chemical mutagenesis. The exochelin biosynthesis gene fxbA and the ferric exochelin uptake gene fxuA, previously
identified by Fiss et al. (E. H. Fiss, S. Yu, and W. R. Jacobs, Jr., Mol. Microbiol. 14:557-559, 1994), were knocked out by
gene replacement. Adjacent chromosomal fragments were used for
homologous recombination in order to replace wild-type genes by the
kanamycin resistance gene from transposon Tn903. Gene
replacement was confirmed by PCR. The isolated mutants show the
expected phenotype: fxbA mutants are defective in exochelin
biosynthesis, whereas fxuA mutants excrete a significantly
larger amount of exochelin compared to the amount excreted by the
parent strain. This is due to their defectiveness in ferriexochelin
uptake, as demonstrated in growth promotion assays. This new set of
mutants allows differentiation of siderophores that supply mycobacteria
with iron by ligand exchange with exochelin or mycobactin, by the use
of separate siderophore uptake routes, or by the use of the exochelin
permease. All these types of iron uptake routes were identified with 25 exogenous siderophores as test substances. Siderophores that act
without ligand exchange are potential candidates as drug vectors that can be used to overcome permeability-mediated resistance.
0066-4804/01/$04.00+0 DOI: 10.1128/AAC.45.5.1317-1322.2001
Copyright © 2001, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Screening System for Xenosiderophores as Potential
Drug Delivery Agents in Mycobacteria
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address:
Hans-Knöll-Institut für Naturstoff-Forschung,
Beutenbergstr. 11, D-07745 Jena, Germany. Phone: 49 3641 656656. Fax:
49 3641 656652. E-mail: moellman{at}pmail.hki-jena.de.
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