Tuberculosis lives and thrives in the lungs. When the bacteria that cause the disease are coughed into the air, they are thrust into a comparatively hostile environment, with drastic changes to their surrounding pH and chemistry. How these bacteria survive their airborne journey is key to their persistence, but very little is known about how they protect themselves as they waft from one host to the next.
Now MIT researchers and their collaborators have discovered a family of genes that becomes essential for survival specifically when the pathogen is exposed to the air, likely protecting the bacterium during its flight.
Many of these genes were previously considered to be nonessential, as they didn’t seem to have any effect on the bacteria’s role in causing disease when injected into a host. The new work suggests that these genes are indeed essential, though for transmission rather than proliferation.