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Combined lactate- and phosphate-dependent cytoplasmic acidification drives Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth arrest at acidic pH

Kibiloski, A. P.; Dechow, S. J.; Abdalla, B. J.; Murdoch, H. M.; Tischler, A. D.; Abramovitch, R. B.

2026-05-16 microbiology
10.64898/2026.05.15.725484 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Mycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) cultured in minimal medium at acidic pH arrests its growth when provided specific single carbon sources, including glycerol, propionate, and lactate, a phenomenon we refer to as acid growth arrest. To define mechanisms of acid growth arrest on lactate, transposon mutants that suppress growth arrest were selected. Four mutants had insertions in phoT and one had an insertion in pstC2, both components of a phosphate ABC transporter. Mtb grows in minimal media supplemented with lactate at acidic pH when phosphate is depleted, showing that Mtb growth arrest on lactate is dependent on phosphate. The combination of lactate and phosphate at acidic pH causes cytoplasmic acidification below pH 6.7 in wild type Mtb, but a phoT::Tn mutant maintains a cytoplasmic pH of >7.2. Membrane potential in wild type Mtb is slightly decreased by lactate in a dose-dependent manner but is higher in the phoT::Tn mutant. Thus, acidic pH, phosphate, and lactate act together to dissipate proton motive force (PMF), a stress that is associated with acid growth arrest. Transcriptional profiling further supports that lactate causes PMF stress including induction of electron transport chain genes. The phoT::Tn mutant grown in lactate at acidic pH upregulates the senX3/regX3 regulon and using a regX3 mutant, we demonstrate that growth on lactate at low phosphate requires regX3. We propose a model where 1) the combined impact of acidic pH, lactate, and phosphate drives cytoplasmic pH acidification and decreased PMF, thus promoting acid growth arrest, and 2) low phosphate or a mutated phosphate transporter causes upregulation of senX3-regX3, which may induce ESX-5 and PPE/PE-based import mechanisms, thereby altering the mycomembrane or nutrient uptake in a manner that promotes growth on lactate at acidic pH. ImportanceMycobacterium tuberculosis (Mtb) grows well on lactate as a sole carbon source at neutral pH, but not at acidic pH. This study sought to understand why there is a pH-dependent growth restriction on lactate. A genetic selection for mutants that can grow on lactate at acidic pH identified mutants defective in phosphate transport. We found that limiting phosphate through depleting extracellular availability or inactivating a phosphate transporter promotes growth on lactate at acidic pH, and that this growth is dependent on the phosphate responsive two-component regulatory system SenX3-RegX3. Furthermore, we show that lactate, phosphate, and acidic pH combine to cause cytoplasmic pH acidification, a metabolic stress that is associated with acid growth arrest on lactate.

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