Nature Communications (Oct 2024)

The double-edged role of FASII regulator FabT in Streptococcus pyogenes infection

  • Clara Lambert,
  • Marine Gaillard,
  • Paprapach Wongdontree,
  • Caroline Bachmann,
  • Antoine Hautcoeur,
  • Karine Gloux,
  • Thomas Guilbert,
  • Celine Méhats,
  • Bastien Prost,
  • Audrey Solgadi,
  • Sonia Abreu,
  • Muriel Andrieu,
  • Claire Poyart,
  • Alexandra Gruss,
  • Agnes Fouet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-52637-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract In Streptococcus pyogenes, the type II fatty acid (FA) synthesis pathway FASII is feedback-controlled by the FabT repressor bound to an acyl-Acyl carrier protein. Although FabT defects confer reduced virulence in animal models, spontaneous fabT mutants arise in vivo. We resolved this paradox by characterizing the conditions and mechanisms requiring FabT activity, and those promoting fabT mutant emergence. The fabT defect leads to energy dissipation, limiting mutant growth on human tissue products, which explains the FabT requirement during infection. Conversely, emerging fabT mutants show superior growth in biotopes rich in saturated FAs, where continued FASII activity limits their incorporation. We propose that membrane alterations and continued FASII synthesis are the primary causes for increased fabT mutant mortality in nutrient‐limited biotopes, by failing to stop metabolic consumption. Our findings elucidate the rationale for emerging fabT mutants that improve bacterial survival in lipid-rich biotopes, but lead to a genetic impasse for infection.