Kevinmcgee Week 11
From LMU BioDB 2013
trypanosomatid Ecotins chymotrypsin amastins Sphingolipids PG-galactosyltransferases pseudogenes ribonuclease glycoinositol-phospholipids prenylation
Contents |
Leishmania Background
- Leishmania Major is a tropical parasite
- Sepctrum of disease, “Leishmaniases”
- broad term describing a flesh eating virus specific to Leishmania
- 2 million infections in 88 countries annually
- Have adapted to avoid host destruction
- curing is very hard and doesn’t always work
Genome Structure and Content
- 32,816,678 base pairs obtained
- 36 chromosomes
- single continuous sequence generated for each chromosome
- 911 RNA genes
- Organized differently in Tritryp genomes from L. Major
- 8272 protein coding genes
- 663 related families
- Smaller gene families arose from gene duplication
- Larger families have single genes at multiple locations on the gene
Genome Comparison
- Leishmania is compared with other organisms
- Trypanosoma Brucei
- Trypanosoma Cruzi
- Leishmania has many orthologs under in these genomes
- 910 genes not orthologs
- “Leishmania Restricted genes”
- responsible for key metabolic differences
- “Leishmania Restricted genes”
- LmjF33.1740 and LmjF33.1750
- Macrophage migration inhibition factor
- Similar to that in humans that deals with immunity from macrophage
- Macrophage migration inhibition factor
Significant Genetic Findings
Transcription
- L. major genome is organized into 133 clusters of tens to hundreds of protein-coding genes on same DNA strand
- Pollycistronic transcription initiates in both directions:
- In divergent strand-switch regions
- terminates within the convergent strand-switch regions
- RNAP I, II and III were found in Trytrip
- Very different from other eukaryotes
- Not many other homologs of RNAP were found
- These findings, along with the polycistronic gene organization, are consistent with posttranscriptional control mechanisms being the primary determinants of Tritryp gene expression
RNA Processing
- Polyadenylation is determined by trans-splicing of downstream mRNA
- Tritryp Poly (A) polymerases
- two distinct ones with different functional roles
- Homologs of CPF are present
- No homologs of CstF are present except for CstF50
- CstF50 deals with poyadenylation and transcription initiation/termination
- reflects polycistronic transcription
- two distinct ones with different functional roles
- Degredation of mRNA is important in gene expression
- Exonucleases involved in decapping of mRNA were found.
- All of these imply reliance on posttranscriptional control of gene expression
Translation and co-/postranslational modification
- Translation machinery are found withing the tritryps
- large amount of elF-4A gene
- Implies nucleic acid binding
- large amount of elF-4A gene
- Protein Modification steps
- phosphorylation
- glycosylation
- lipidation
- Essential modifications
- glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor addition
- acytlation
- protein-protein interaction
- Enzymes that catalyze these modifications are potential drug targets
Surface molecules
- Surface molecules are very important in the infection process
- lipophosphoglycan (LPG)
- assembled in the lumen of the golgi apparatus
- entire synthetic pathway has not been fully mapped
- glycoinositol-phospholipids (GIPLs)
- membrane proteophosphoglycan (PPG)
- glycosylated GPI-anchored proteins
- lipophosphoglycan (LPG)
- Sphingolipids are essential membrane componenets of eukaryotes
- good drug targets
Proteolysis
- Peptidases have already been identified as virulence factors and vaccine candidates
Implications
- Tritryp genomes help show unique biology of Leishmania and give insight to Eukaryote evolution
- Leishmania branched off from other eukaryotes very early on
- Differences arose after branching off of Leishmania
- Differences from other eukaryotes: posttranslational modification
- polycistronic gene clusters
- mRNA trans-splicing coupled with polyadenylation
- Full genome provides crucial information for new therapies of Leishmaniasis
- analysis of virulence factors
- enzymes in metabolic pathways
- potential vaccine candidates
TritrypDB
- Contains mostly sequences that are manually added by the community. It is a meta database.
- It is held under the EuPathDB Bioinformatics Resource Center
- Funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Welcome Trust
- Database is free and open to the public as long as proper citation is included
- Updated as new information comes in. Last update was in September of this year
- Yes. There are links to other databases on every organism that is on the site.
- Files can be downloaded in FAFSTA and gff.
- The database was somewhat friendly. It is organized well enough and there is a help section, but things are very clearly defined to me and I got lost easily. The eample querry gave me what I was looking for, but when I typed into Leishmania Major the actual data for L. Major was far down the page.
- LmjF.##.###
Kevinmcgee (talk) 22:07, 11 November 2013 (PST)