| Literature DB >> 21749699 |
Emily N Barker1, Alistair C Darby, Chris R Helps, Iain R Peters, Kate J Heesom, Christopher J Arthur, Ben Crossett, Margaret A Hughes, Alan D Radford, Séverine Tasker.
Abstract
Mycoplasma haemofelis is a pathogenic feline hemoplasma. Despite its importance, little is known about its metabolic pathways or mechanism of pathogenicity due to it being uncultivatable. The recently sequenced M. haemofelis str. Langford 1 genome was analysed and compared to those of other available hemoplasma genomes.Analysis showed that in hemoplasmas genes involved in carbohydrate metabolism are limited to enzymes of the glycolytic pathway, with glucose appearing to be the sole energy source. The majority of the pentose phosphate pathway enzymes that catalyze the de novo synthesis of ribonucleotides were absent, as were cell division protein FtsZ and chaperonins GroEL/ES. Uncharacterized protein paralogs containing putative surface expression motifs, comprised 62% of M. haemofelis and 19% of Mycoplasma suis genome coverage respectively, the majority of which were present in a small number of unstructured islands. Limited mass spectrometry and immunoblot data matched a number of characterized proteins and uncharacterized paralogs, confirming their expression and immunogenicity in vivo.These data have allowed further characterization of these important pathogens, including their limited metabolic capabilities, which may contribute to their uncultivatable status. A number of immunogenic proteins, and a potential mechanism for host immune system evasion, have been identified.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21749699 PMCID: PMC3146833 DOI: 10.1186/1297-9716-42-83
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Vet Res ISSN: 0928-4249 Impact factor: 3.683
Figure 1Circular representation of the . Outer concentric circle: genomic positions in bases, where position one is the first base of the gene. Second concentric circle: the predicted genes on the positive strand (excluding uncharacterized paralog genes). Third concentric circle: the predicted genes on the negative strand (excluding uncharacterized paralog genes). Information storage and processing (red), cellular processes and signaling (green), metabolism (blue), and poorly characterized (yellow). Fourth concentric circle: uncharacterized paralog genes (pink on the forward strand, purple on the negative strand). Fifth concentric circle: tRNA (green), rRNAs (red) and ribonuclease P ribosomal subunit (blue). Sixth concentric circle: the GC-skew diagram; where the black color indicates that the leading strand contains more Gs than Cs, and the red color indicates the more Cs than Gs.
General attributes of the sequenced hemoplasma genomes.
| Hemoplasma species | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1st codon | 43.5 | 43.5 | 41.0 | 41.1 |
| 2nd codon | 37.6 | 37.6 | 33.1 | 33.3 |
| 3rd codon | 36.0 | 35.9 | 20.3 | 20.1 |
| Uncharacterized ORFs (of which were identified as paralogs) | 1 228 (1 115) | 1 251 (1,013) | 523 (229) | 550 (240) |
| Ribosomal RNA (16S; 5S and 23S) | 3 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
| Transfer RNA | 31 | 31 | 32 | 32 |
| Ribonuclease P β-subunit gene | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
ORF = open reading frame
Figure 2PROmer dotplot matrix of intra-genomic protein comparisons of Mycoplasma haemofelis str. Langford 1 (A) and Mycoplasma suis. str. KI_3806 (B). The genomes were BLASTx compared against themselves. Each dot represents a significant protein match: forward matches are colored red and reverse matches colored blue. Dots present on either side of the diagonal line represent repeated proteins.