Gleis Week 11
GO Terms
Metacyclic: produced in an intermediate host, and infective for the definitive host; said of the infective stages of trypanosomes. http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/metacyclic
Promastigote:The flagellate stage of a trypanosomatid protozoan, as that of any of the Leishmania parasites http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/promastigote
Phagolysosome:a cytoplasmic body formed by the fusion of a phagosome, or ingested particle, with a lysosome containing hydrolytic enzymes. The enzymes digest most of the material within the phagosome http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/phagolysosome
Tripartite:having three corresponding parts or copies http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/tripartite
"Repeated-repeat": repeated tandem repeats, Copies of DNA sequences which lie adjacent to each other in the same orientation (direct tandem repeats) or in the opposite direction to each other http://www.nlm.nih.gov/cgi/mesh/2011/MB_cgi?mode=&term=Tandem+Repeat
bacterial clade:Related organisms descended from a common ancestor. For example, isolate M of HIV-1 (the human immunodeficiency virus) consists of at least ten clades. Imported from the Greek, klados, branch in 1911 in reference to the Tree of Life. http://www.medterms.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=22233
filarial:related to or infested with or transmitting parasitic worms especially filaria http://wordnetweb.princeton.edu/perl/webwn?s=filarial
trypanosomatid:common name for a member of the family Trypanosomatidae http://medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/trypanosomatid
chromodomain:Chromodomains are highly conserved sequence motifs that have been identified in a variety of animal and plant species. A chromodomain harbours a methylated lysine residue. http://www.springerreference.com/docs/html/chapterdbid/34668.html
bromodomain:Protein containing at least one bromodomain. The bromodomain is a conserved region, approximately 70 amino acids, characteristic for a class of regulatory proteins. It mediates interactions with proteins that are necessary for transcriptional activation. http://www.uniprot.org/keywords/KW-0103
Reference Article Outline
I. Abstract
- Leishmania major causes leishmaniasis, a dreadful human disease found throughout the world.
- Many genes currently studied involved the pathogenic nature of Leishmania major
- The lack of certain genes in the genome of Leishmania suggest novel expression and regulation systems
II. Introduction
- Leishmania parasites are transmitted by sand flies
- Once Leishmania have infected the host, the parasite subsequently proliferates and spreads throughout the host.
- Different Leishmania species exhibit differences in genome composition and structure
- This article presents the structure and content of the Leishmania major genome
- Special emphasis is given to fundamental molecular processes and pathogen-speicific functions
III. Genome structure and content
- Shotgun sequencing was used to sequence the genome chromosome by chromosome
- Table 1 is a summary of genome information for Leishmania. It includes size and gene information
- Table 2 includes information regarding families of genes in the Leishmania genome
- Several algorithms were used to predict the number of genes of each type in the genome
- Many genes in Leishmania major resemble genes other Leishmania species
- Some genes appear to be Leishmania major specific
- The Leishmania genome contains genes for MIFs which are likely responsible for the promotion of parasite survival in the host.
IV. RNA genes
- RNA participate in many important cellular processes
- RNA genes are similar between Leishmania species but their organization in the genome varies
- The genomes of Leishmania species demonstrate similarity in RNA composition and function
V. Chromatin remodeling
- Chromatin remodeling genes are distributed throughout the genome in L. major as opposed to clustering in other species
- The L. major genome contains several genes responsible for various histone modifications as well as chromatin modifications
- The modifications include acetylation and methylation
VI. Transcription
- The Leishmania major genome demonstrates unique gene clustering
- Transcription initiation in L. major is not fully understood but transcription appears to begin bidirectionally in strand-switch regions
- The genomes of Leishmania species lack components of genes encoding for RNA polymerase
- The genes for RNA polymerase vary greatly from other species
- Few homologs were found for RNA polymerase transcription factors
- Figure 1 provides a graphical image of Leishmania RNA polymerase subunits and transcription factors
- The genes located in the genome suggest post transcriptional control mechanisms as the primary determinants of gene expression
- Figure 2 provides information on the association of protein domains and gene expression regulation
- The bar graph demonstrates individual genome sequence similarity for protein domains
VII. RNA Processing
- mRNA processing is unique trypanasomatids
- However, many spliceosome proteins were identified in the genome
- Advanced splicing regulatory protein networks were identified suggesting early evolutionary development
- Two distinct, dissimilar poly(A) polymerases were identified
- The absence of certain polymerase domains reflects the polycistronic transcription of the organism
- Genes playing a role in mRNA degradation have been identified and appear similar to mammalian genes
- Leishmania lacks regulation and specificity of these mRNA degrading proteins
- A high number of RNA recognition motifs furthers suggest polycistronic transcription
- A novel domain was identified in these RNA binding proteins
VIII. Translation and post translational modification
- Genes encoding translation machinery are similar to that of other lower Eukaryotes
- Relatively high number of translation factors suggests high degree of specialization
- The genome encodes for typical protein modification processes
- A particularly high number of genes encode for enzymes that produce certain protein modifications
- These enzymes could be potential drug targets
IX. Surface Molecules
- Surface molecules are particularly important for Leishmania due to infectious processes requiring these molecules
- Many genes encoding for these surface molecules appear to be novel and have not been completely identified
- Some of these molecules are assembled in the lumen of the golgi due to a need for sugar assembly
- L. major specific genes have been identified for these processes
- Some of these genes are clustered together on the genome
- The primary sphingolipid in Leishmania is IPC
- This is not produced in mammals and is therefore and excellent drug target
- The major insect stage surface protein of Leishmania is GP63 which is a zinc metallopeptidase
- Surface proteins appear to be expressed variably with development
- L. major shares surface molecule similarity to other related species
X. Proteolysis
- Peptidases are very diverse and are characterized by evolutionary similarity
- L. major lacks certain peptidases common to other parasites but share similarities to other Leishmania species
- Exhibit nonlysosomal protein degradation through ubiquitin
- Cell death through caspase independent mechanism
- No trypsin/chymotripsin
- Other serene peptidases present as well as other metallopeptidases other than GP63
- Lack certain peptidase inhibitors but exhibit inhibitors not present in mammals
- Produce inhibitors of peptidases to aid in infection of host
XI. Conclusion
- Leishmania genomes share many similarities but genomic differences express important factors that enable specific functioning of the organism
- Genomic data provides important insight to drug targets for Leishmanaiasis
Model Organism Database
http://tritrypdb.org/tritrypdb/
- Sequence information, functional data and annotations are included in the database; meta-database, curated manually in a community setting
- EuPathDB maintains the site. A special committee of Leishmania experts from a variety of universities oversees the curation of the TriTrypDB site
- Funding is provided by The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust, and NIAID
- Data is provided freely for public use. No restrictions.
- Last updated 25 September 2013
- There are links to GeneDB as well as EuPathDB. THe website also provides links to a variety of tools contained in other databases.
- Files are available to download in many formats such as .ppt .pdf .docx .tiff .jpg .txt .gff
- The website is fairly easy to follow although the site navigation is not the most intuitive. There is a help section with a variety of video tutorials. The results make sense as long as the desired result is specific.
- LmjF.##.####