| Literature DB >> 19653891 |
Ian H Cheeseman1, Natalia Gomez-Escobar, Celine K Carret, Alasdair Ivens, Lindsay B Stewart, Kevin K A Tetteh, David J Conway.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Gene copy number variation (CNV) is responsible for several important phenotypes of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum, including drug resistance, loss of infected erythrocyte cytoadherence and alteration of receptor usage for erythrocyte invasion. Despite the known effects of CNV, little is known about its extent throughout the genome.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19653891 PMCID: PMC2732925 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-10-353
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Figure 1The genomic location of CNVs. (A) Frequencies of CNV for each gene along the genome for each chromosome is shown above the axis for amplifications and below the axis for deletions. Total numbers of CNV genes are given at the left hand side of each chromosome with the number of CNV var, rifin and stevor genes in brackets. (B) Distance to telomeric ends is shown to be significantly decreased in CNV genes (grey bars) in comparison to non-CNV genes (hashed bars). (C) Fraction of a chromosomal gene content classed as a CNV gene declined as number of genes per chromosome increased (open circles), this trend became weaker when the chromosomal portion excluding the sub-telomeric ends was examined (black closed circles). A significant divergence in gradient from 0 was detected only when all genes were analysed together, with multiple-adjusted r2 values indicating a prominent role for chromosome length in predicting its proportion of CNV genes.
Properties of CNV genes compared with non-CNV genes in P. falciparum
| Property | Common CNVs | Rare CNVs | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Observed | Expected | observed | expected | ||||
| Proximity to centromeresb | ↑ | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||
| Proximity to telomeresb | ↑ | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||
| Signal peptidea | n/a | 0.92 | 14 | 13.8 | 0.59 | 18 | 13.1 |
| Tm domaina | ↑ | 35 | 25.24 | 48 | 30.35 | ||
| Length (bp)b | ↓ | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||
| Proximity to segmental duplications | ↑ | n/a | n/a | n/a | n/a | ||
| Rodent malaria parasite orthologuea | ↓ | 13 | 64.38 | 32 | 77.42 | ||
| ↓ | 15 | 64.5 | 37 | 77.56 | |||
| any orthologuesa | ↓ | 18 | 55.3 | 37 | 66.5 | ||
Expected values were calculated under the assumption that each property is distributed evenly throughout the genome
Values where p < 0.05 shaded in bold
aChi-squared test; bKolmogorov-Smirnov test
Figure 2CNV regions in the . Detection of previously described multi-genic deletions and amplifications. Plots show log2 hybridisation signal of individual genes in physical order along chromosomal length with cut-offs for amplification/deletion of a gene shown by lines at 1/-1 respectively. Heatmaps show CNV regions at greater resolution for all hybridised strains with genes amplified or deleted as indicated by the colour key (yellow and blue respectively). A. Multi-genic deletion on chromosome 9. B. Multi-genic amplification on chromosome 5.
Figure 3Features of CNV dataset. (A) 99 CNV genes (58 amplifications, 41 deletions) were detected in a single isolate whereas 87 were replicated between isolates and classed as common CNVs. (B) Consecutively detected CNV genes are infrequent for both amplifications (black bars) and deletions (white bars), the vast majority being non-adjacent to variable regions, the few large variants that we detected have been previously described and include sub-telomeric truncations in chromosomes 2 and 9 and amplification of the pfmdr1 gene locus on chromosome 5. Within consecutive CNV regions it was rare to find hybridisation signals uniformly outside of the cut-offs. Genes that precluded detection using this stringent cut-off though showed clear patterns of variation were identified as those adjacent to identified CNV genes and possessed a log2 ratio of +/- 0.8. (C) Length of CNV genes was shown to be a highly significant property of CNV genes being smaller than non-CNV genes.