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Control of replication and gene expression by ADP-ribosylation of DNA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis

Control of replication and gene expression by ADP-ribosylation of DNA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Control of replication and gene expression by ADP-ribosylation of DNA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Mycobacterium tuberculosis maintains long-term infections characterised by the need to regulate growth and adapt to contrasting in vivo environments. Here we show that M. tuberculosis complex bacteria utilise reversible ADP-ribosylation of single-stranded DNA as a mechanism to coordinate stationary phase growth with transcriptional adaptation. The DNA modification is controlled by DarT, an ADP-ribosyltransferase, which adds ADP-ribose to thymidine, and DarG, which enzymatically removes this base modification. Using darG-knockdown M. bovis BCG, we map the first DNA ADP-ribosylome from any organism. We show that inhibition of replication by DarT is reversible and accompanied by extensive ADP-ribosylation at the origin of replication (OriC). In addition, we observe ADP-ribosylation across the genome and demonstrate that ADP-ribose-thymidine alters the transcriptional activity of M. tuberculosis RNA polymerase. Furthermore, we demonstrate that during stationary phase, DarT-dependent ADP-ribosylation of M. tuberculosis DNA is required to optimally induce expression of the Zur regulon, including the ESX-3 secretion system and multiple alternative ribosome proteins. Thus, ADP-ribosylation of DNA can provide a mechanistic link through every aspect of DNA biology from replication to transcription to translation.

0261-4189
3468-3491
Butler, Rachel E.
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Schuller, Marion
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Jaiswal, Ritu
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Mukhopadhyay, Jayanta
a65ae38c-4e47-44cf-9968-f511e745bf3d
Barber, Jim
53cd387a-5812-4cde-808f-7ad8a54a4231
Hingley-Wilson, Suzie
ddf28969-39b1-4361-b8ba-cce9ff3a9c1b
Wasson, Emily
25bfde3c-c7b1-486f-afc9-93d5f4cba213
Couto Alves, Alexessander
87b9179e-abde-4ca5-abfc-4b7c5ac8b03b
Ahel, Ivan
3869af00-c05d-445a-a444-1a8ccbb4d005
Stewart, Graham R.
f030a7fe-01f0-4196-89e5-80b98518a72f
Butler, Rachel E.
25329ed6-edcb-4cc6-97dc-637c19bba924
Schuller, Marion
c15c41c2-7762-4572-92d6-e3e57a40142a
Jaiswal, Ritu
20a7704a-b940-438f-888f-8f76d1512e7a
Mukhopadhyay, Jayanta
a65ae38c-4e47-44cf-9968-f511e745bf3d
Barber, Jim
53cd387a-5812-4cde-808f-7ad8a54a4231
Hingley-Wilson, Suzie
ddf28969-39b1-4361-b8ba-cce9ff3a9c1b
Wasson, Emily
25bfde3c-c7b1-486f-afc9-93d5f4cba213
Couto Alves, Alexessander
87b9179e-abde-4ca5-abfc-4b7c5ac8b03b
Ahel, Ivan
3869af00-c05d-445a-a444-1a8ccbb4d005
Stewart, Graham R.
f030a7fe-01f0-4196-89e5-80b98518a72f

Butler, Rachel E., Schuller, Marion, Jaiswal, Ritu, Mukhopadhyay, Jayanta, Barber, Jim, Hingley-Wilson, Suzie, Wasson, Emily, Couto Alves, Alexessander, Ahel, Ivan and Stewart, Graham R. (2025) Control of replication and gene expression by ADP-ribosylation of DNA in Mycobacterium tuberculosis. The EMBO Journal, 44, 3468-3491. (doi:10.1038/s44318-025-00451-y).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis maintains long-term infections characterised by the need to regulate growth and adapt to contrasting in vivo environments. Here we show that M. tuberculosis complex bacteria utilise reversible ADP-ribosylation of single-stranded DNA as a mechanism to coordinate stationary phase growth with transcriptional adaptation. The DNA modification is controlled by DarT, an ADP-ribosyltransferase, which adds ADP-ribose to thymidine, and DarG, which enzymatically removes this base modification. Using darG-knockdown M. bovis BCG, we map the first DNA ADP-ribosylome from any organism. We show that inhibition of replication by DarT is reversible and accompanied by extensive ADP-ribosylation at the origin of replication (OriC). In addition, we observe ADP-ribosylation across the genome and demonstrate that ADP-ribose-thymidine alters the transcriptional activity of M. tuberculosis RNA polymerase. Furthermore, we demonstrate that during stationary phase, DarT-dependent ADP-ribosylation of M. tuberculosis DNA is required to optimally induce expression of the Zur regulon, including the ESX-3 secretion system and multiple alternative ribosome proteins. Thus, ADP-ribosylation of DNA can provide a mechanistic link through every aspect of DNA biology from replication to transcription to translation.

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s44318-025-00451-y - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 22 April 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 May 2025
Published date: 8 May 2025
Additional Information: Correction Notice: a correction to this research output can be found at: https://doi.org/10.1038/s44318-025-00491-4

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 510084
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510084
ISSN: 0261-4189
PURE UUID: 7c41fe9e-cf1b-4204-a490-cee2c131bc99
ORCID for Alexessander Couto Alves: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8519-7356

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Date deposited: 17 Mar 2026 17:37
Last modified: 19 Mar 2026 03:13

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Contributors

Author: Rachel E. Butler
Author: Marion Schuller
Author: Ritu Jaiswal
Author: Jayanta Mukhopadhyay
Author: Jim Barber
Author: Suzie Hingley-Wilson
Author: Emily Wasson
Author: Alexessander Couto Alves ORCID iD
Author: Ivan Ahel
Author: Graham R. Stewart

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