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Pathogen-derived glyoxylate inhibits Tet2 DNA dioxygenase to facilitate bacterial persister formation

Cell Metabolism [2025]
Zhou-Li Cheng, Shuyuan Zhang, Zhenning Wang, Aixia Song, Chao Gao, Jun-Bin Song, Pu Wang, Lei Zhang, Yue Zhou, Wenyan Shan, Chen Zhang, Jinye Zhang, Yiping Sun, Yanhui Xu, Fei Lan, Ming Zhong, Liang-Dong Lyu, Guanghua Huang, Fei Xavier Chen, Gang Li, Zixin Wang, Faying Chen, Jianhuang Xue, Jiejun Shi, Yujun Liu, Zihao Lin, Duojiao Wu, Jim Na, Lei-Lei Chen, Kun-Liang Guan, Yue Xiong, Dan Ye
ABSTRACT

Pathogenic bacterial persistence enables survival during antibiotic treatment, leading to treatment failure and recurrent infections, yet its underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Here, we reveal that glyoxylate, a metabolite originally evolved for alternative carbon utilization, functions as a signaling molecule to reprogram the host transcriptome and promote persister formation. Glyoxylate inhibits the DNA dioxygenase TET2, suppressing pro-inflammatory gene expression and attenuating host immune defense. Notably, stimulating TET2 activity with vitamin C or blocking glyoxylate production by Salmonella reduces bacterial antibiotic resistance and improves infection treatment outcomes. Beyond its metabolic role, glyoxylate emerges as a regulator of host-pathogen interactions, while TET2 plays a critical role in preventing bacterial persistence. Our findings suggest that targeting glyoxylate production or enhancing TET2 activity offers promising therapeutic strategies to combat bacterial persistence and enhance the efficacy of antibiotic treatments.

MATERIALS

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