| Literature DB >> 23374913 |
Arkadiusz Gladki1, Szymon Kaczanowski, Pawel Szczesny, Piotr Zielenkiewicz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: One of the major issues in the fight against infectious diseases is the notable increase in multiple drug resistance in pathogenic species. For that reason, newly acquired high-throughput data on virulent microbial agents attract the attention of many researchers seeking potential new drug targets. Many approaches have been used to evaluate proteins from infectious pathogens, including, but not limited to, similarity analysis, reverse docking, statistical 3D structure analysis, machine learning, topological properties of interaction networks or a combination of the aforementioned methods. From a biological perspective, most essential proteins (knockout lethal for bacteria) or highly conserved proteins (broad spectrum activity) are potential drug targets. Ribosomal proteins comprise such an example. Many of them are well-known drug targets in bacteria. It is intuitive that we should learn from nature how to design good drugs. Firstly, known antibiotics are mainly originating from natural products of microorganisms targeting other microorganisms. Secondly, paleontological data suggests that antibiotics have been used by microorganisms for million years. Thus, we have hypothesized that good drug targets are evolutionary constrained and are subject of evolutionary selection. This means that mutations in such proteins are deleterious and removed by selection, which makes them less susceptible to random development of resistance. Analysis of the speed of evolution seems to be good approach to test this hypothesis.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23374913 PMCID: PMC3598507 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2105-14-36
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Bioinformatics ISSN: 1471-2105 Impact factor: 3.169
Summary of the data used at pN/pS analysis
| 155864, 199310, 316407, 331111, 331112, 362663, 364106, 386585, 405955 | 4294 | 771 | 41 | |
| (3104) | (616) | (31) | ||
| 119857, 177416, 393011, 393115, 418136, 458234 | 1719 | 391 | 34 | |
| (1065) | (320) | (32) | ||
| 262727, 262728, 281310, 374927, 374928, 374930, 374931, 374932, 374933, 375063, 375177, 375432 | 1581 | 477 | 39 | |
| (1024) | (399) | (34) | ||
| 357544, 85963 | 1576 | 336 | 30 | |
| (992) | (292) | (28) | ||
| 208963, 381754 | 5892 | 335 | 40 | |
| (4530) | (305) | (36) | ||
| 209261, 220341, 295319, 321314 | 4425 | 481 | 41 | |
| (3140) | (403) | (31) | ||
| 158878, 158879, 196620, 273036, 282458, 282459, 359786, 359787, 367830, 418127, 426430, 93062 | 2892 | 351 | 35 | |
| (1918) | (277) | (28) | ||
| 171101, 373153, 406556, 406557, 406558, 406559, 406560, 406561, 406562, 406563 | 1965 | 195 | 37 | |
| (1532) | (175) | (33) |
*All genes, essential genes and drug targets comprised the three groups of genes compared in our study. The final analysis was restricted to genes for which no recombination events were detected, numbers of which are presented in brackets.
Figure 1Evolutionary rate differences of four Enterobacteriaceae species. Evaluation of evolutionary rate differences between three sets of genes of interest: ALL -all genes, ESS - essential genes and ADT - approved drug targets). Evolutionary rate was estimated using (pN/pS ratio). In this case pN/pS values were compared using Mann–Whitney U test (wilcox.test in R language, two sided hypothesis tested). Box plots of means of pN/pS with 95% confidence intervals are presented (number of genes in given set are shown in brackets). Result for four species from Enterobacteriaceae. Abbreviations: ECO: Escherichia coli, STM – Salmonella typhimurium, PAU – Pseudomonas aeruginosa, FTN – Francisella novicida.
Figure 2Evolutionary rate differences of four non-Enterobacteriaceae species. Evaluation of evolutionary rate differences between three sets of genes of interest: ALL -all genes, ESS - essential genes and ADT - approved drug targets). Evolutionary rate was estimated using (pN/pS ratio). In this case pN/pS values were compared using Mann–Whitney U test (wilcox.test in R language, two sided hypothesis tested). Box plots of means of pN/pS with 95% confidence intervals are presented (number of genes in given set are shown in brackets). Result for four species not from Enterobacteriaceae taxon. Abbreviations: HPY: Helicobacter pylori, HIN – Haemophilus influenzae, SAO – Staphylococcus aureus, SPN – Streptococcus pneumoniae.
Ranking of known drug targets (from the evolutionary perspective)
| Cycloserine | ko:K01921 | 0.5813 | 0.136342 | ddl; D-alanyl-alanine synthetase A |
| | ko:K01775 | 0.4017 | 0.260427 | alr; alanine racemase |
| Triclosan | ko:K00208 | 0.2425 | 0.084719 | fabI; enoyl-(acyl carrier protein) reductase |
| Trimethoprim | ko:K00287 | 0.6356 | 0.265319 | folA; dihydrofolate reductase |
| Sulphonamides | ko:K00796 | 0.5708 | 0.213370 | folP; dihydropteroate synthase |
| Fusidic acid | ko:K02355 | 0.1284 | 0.104805 | fusA; elongation factor G |
| Mupirocin | ko:K01870 | 0.3031 | 0.139443 | ileS; isoleucyl-tRNA synthetase |
| Quinolones | ko:K02469 | 0.3063 | 0.167897 | gyrA; DNA gyrase subunit A |
| | ko:K02470 | 0.2195 | 0.192711 | gyrB; DNA gyrase subunit B |
| | ko:K02621 | 0.3364 | 0.158633 | parC; DNA topoisomerase IV subunit A |
| | ko:K02622 | 0.3016 | 0.231233 | parE; DNA topoisomerase IV subunit B |
| Rifampin | ko:K03046 | 0.1263 | 0.047384 | rpoC; DNA-directed RNA polymerase subunit beta' |
| | ko:K03043 | 0.1423 | 0.092346 | rpoB; DNA-directed RNA polymerase subunit beta |
| | ko:K03040 | 0.4072 | 0.388638 | rpoA; DNA-directed RNA polymerase subunit alpha |
| Macrolides | ko:K02926 | 0.2090 | 0.242629 | rplD; 50S ribosomal protein L4 |
| | ko:K02890 | 0.2212 | 0.408734 | rplV; 50S ribosomal protein L22 |
| | ko:K02864 | 0.4581 | 0.364803 | rplJ; 50S ribosomal protein L10 |
| | ko:K02911 | 0.5297 | 0.438268 | rpmF; 50S ribosomal protein L32 |
| Tetracyclines | ko:K02986 | 0.4107 | 0.343409 | rpsD; 30S ribosomal protein S4 |
| | ko:K02982 | 0.1927 | 0.187825 | rpsC; 30S ribosomal protein S3 |
| | ko:K02965 | 0.1139 | 0.171661 | rpsS; 30S ribosomal protein S19 |
| | ko:K02992 | 0.3173 | 0.327775 | rpsG; 30S ribosomal protein S7 |
| | ko:K02954 | 0.4495 | 0.467237 | rpsN; 30S ribosomal protein S14 |
| | ko:K02994 | 0.1578 | 0.203180 | rpsH; 30S ribosomal protein S8 |
| | ko:K02996 | 0.1692 | 0.216565 | rpsI; 30S ribosomal protein S9 |
| Glacycyline | ko:K02952 | 0.6584 | 0.422977 | rpsM; 30S ribosomal protein S13 |
| Retapamulin | ko:K02906 | 0.2112 | 0.307444 | rplC; 50S ribosomal protein L3 |
| Aminoglycosides | ko:K02946 | 0.1711 | 0.293128 | rpsJ, nusE; 30S ribosomal protein S10 |
| | ko:K02878 | 0.1300 | 0.151462 | rplP; 50S ribosomal protein L16 |
| | ko:K02950 | 0.4372 | 0.425007 | rpsL; 30S ribosomal protein S12 |
| beta-lactam antibiotics | ko:K07258 | 0.4060 | 0.280471 | dacA; D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase fraction A |
| | ko:K05515 | 0.2293 | 0.118958 | mrdA; penicillin-binding protein 2 |
| | ko:K03693 | 0.4693 | 0.000000 | penicillin-binding protein 1B |
| | ko:K03587 | 0.2658 | 0.077185 | ftsI; division specific transpeptidase (PBP3) |
| | ko:K00687 | 0.3279 | 0.000000 | penicillin-binding protein 2B |
| | ko:K12553 | 0.4829 | 0.000000 | penicillin-binding protein 3 |
| | ko:K05365 | 0.3425 | 0.334610 | mrcB, ponB; penicillin-binding protein 1B |
| | ko:K05366 | 0.3644 | 0.086939 | mrcA; penicillin-binding protein 1A |
| | ko:K07262 | 0.3863 | 0.118514 | pbpG; D-alanyl-D-alanine endopeptidase |
| | ko:K12556 | 0.3431 | 0.000000 | penicillin-binding protein 2X |
| | ko:K12555 | 0.5859 | 0.000000 | penicillin-binding protein 2A |
| | ko:K05367 | 0.7132 | 0.001414 | pbpC; penicillin-binding protein 1C |
| | ko:K07259 | 0.3973 | 0.161482 | dacB; D-alanyl-D-alanine carboxypeptidase/endopeptidase |
| Fosfomycin | ko:K00790 | 0.2551 | 0.183465 | murA; UDP-N-acetylglucosamine 1-carboxyvinyltransferase |
Drug targets are ordered by drug class. Mean pN/pS as well as standard deviation (SD) were calculated using data from eight species analyzed in the study.
GO analysis for slowly evolving genes
| GO:0005198 | 2.7e–37 | 0.00523 | 0.0359 | structural molecule activity |
| GO:0005515 | 1.8e–12 | 0.0257 | 0.0685 | protein binding |
| GO:0005488 | 2.9e–12 | 0.274 | 0.373 | binding |
| GO:0019843 | 1.4e–06 | 0.0028 | 0.0194 | rRNA binding |
| GO:0015453 | 0.00043 | 0.000997 | 0.00627 | oxidoreduction-driven active transmembrane transporter activity |
| GO:0000104 | 0.0076 | 0.000436 | 0.00285 | succinate dehydrogenase activity |
| GO:0016667 | 0.011 | 0.00567 | 0.012 | oxidoreductase activity, acting on a sulfur group of donors |
| GO:0003735 | 0.014 | 0.00392 | 0.0308 | structural constituent of ribosome |
| GO:0015078 | 0.027 | 0.00361 | 0.00856 | hydrogen ion transmembrane transporter activity |
| GO:0046872 | 0.045 | 0.0756 | 0.105 | metal ion binding |
Enrichment of GO terms (molecular function domain): data for slowly evolving genes. Ten percent of genes (of eight studied species) with the lowest pN/pS rank comprised the study set. Genes with reliable pN/pS (of eight studied species) comprised the population set. Analysis was performed using Ontologizer (with Benjamini-Hochberg correction for multiple testing and Parent–child-Union Settings).