| Literature DB >> 23607288 |
Sebastián Aguilar Pierlé1, Gena Kenitra Hammac, Guy H Palmer, Kelly A Brayton.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The ability to genetically manipulate bacteria has been fundamentally important for both basic biological discovery and translational research to develop new vaccines and antibiotics. Experimental alteration of the genetic content of prokaryotic pathogens has revealed both expected functional relationships and unexpected phenotypic consequences. Slow growth phenotypes have been reported for multiple transformed bacterial species, including extracellular and intracellular pathogens. Understanding the genes and pathways responsible for the slow growth phenotype provides the opportunity to develop attenuated vaccines as well as bacteriostatic antibiotics. Transformed Anaplasma marginale, a rickettsial pathogen, exhibits slow growth in vitro and in vivo as compared to the parent wild type strain, providing the opportunity to identify the underlying genes and pathways associated with this phenotype.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23607288 PMCID: PMC3646689 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-14-272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
Reads mapped to theSt. Maries genome
| 59,342,223 | 1,667,455 | 2.8 | 100 | |
| 54,170,723 | 1,816,895 | 3.4 | 100 | |
| 76,734,051 | 2,474,678 | 3.2 | 100 | |
| 62,196,873 | 8,494,596 | 13.7 | 100 | |
| 65,911,848 | 8,220,811 | 12.5 | 100 | |
| 103,604,396 | 9,895,940 | 9.5 | 100 |
AmTR: transformed, slow growth phenotype A. marginale.
WT: wild type A. marginale.
Transcriptional status of genes flanking the insertion site of AmTR
| | ||
|---|---|---|
| 291 | 2079 | |
| 374 | 245 | |
| 379 | 779 | |
| 570 | 57 | |
| 400 | 191 | |
| 256 | 843 | |
| 185 | 55 | |
| 61 | 11 | |
| 1407 | 185 | |
| 2803 | 1119 | |
| 2878 | 3841 | |
| 2523 | 1375 | |
| 1073 | 193 | |
| 317 | 531 | |
| 385 | 346 | |
| 239 | 1170 | |
| 177 | 1357 | |
| 157 | 413 | |
| 120 | 112 | |
| 55 | 45 | |
*AmTR: transformed; A. marginale WT: wild type A. marginale.
Figure 1Fold change in AmTR compared to wild type. Locus tags for all genes are given on the X axis. The top 20 differentially transcribed genes identified across two replicates and two statistical tests and their fold changes are shown. All fold changes were found to be statistically significant at p < 5.05E-5 across both statistical tests.
Figure 2Clusters identified through k-means clustering of AmTR versus wild type. The 5 clusters identified in this study are displayed. The Y axis shows normalized expression values (RPKM). The X axis displays the values found for wild type (WT) and AmTR. Each colored line represents a different gene included in the cluster. The mean gene expression value over all input samples was subtracted to each gene’s value. Cluster affiliation for each gene can be found in Additional file 1.
Significantly affected pathways in wild type vs. AmTR comparison through GSEA
| Translation (PMID:16482227 [ISS] Pfam:PF00573) | 0.0044 | 0.9956 | |
| Translational elongation (PMID:16482227 [ISS] Pfam:PF00889) | 0.0071 | 0.9929 | |
| Pantothenate biosynthetic process (PMID:12721629 [ISS] TIGR_TIGRFAMS:TIGR00018) | 0.0158 | 0.9842 | |
| Seryl-tRNA aminoacylation (PMID:16482227 [ISS] TIGR_TIGRFAMS:TIGR00414) | 0.0322 | 0.9678 | |
| ATP synthesis coupled proton transport (PMID:16482227 [ISS] TIGR_TIGRFAMS:TIGR01216) | 0.0343 | 0.966 | |
| Phospholipid biosynthetic process (PMID:12721629 [ISS] Swiss-Prot:O31752) | 0.0343 | 0.9657 | |
| Pyridine nucleotide biosynthetic process (PMID:16482227 [ISS] TIGR_TIGRFAMS:TIGR00550) | 0.0381 | 0.9619 | |
| DNA topological change (PMID:16482227 [ISS] TIGR_TIGRFAMS:TIGR01051) | 0.9648 | 0.0352 | |
| rRNA processing (GO_REF:0000012 [ISS] Swiss-Prot:P21513) | 0.9673 | 0.0327 | |
| Barrier septum formation (PMID:16482227 [ISS] TIGR_TIGRFAMS:TIGR00172) | 0.9899 | 0.0101 | |
| Purine ribonucleotide biosynthetic process (PMID:16482227 [ISS] TIGR_TIGRFAMS:TIGR00184) | 0.9997 | 0.0003 |
*Lower/Upper tail: The different pathways evaluated in through GSEA are shown. Lower and Upper tail values show the mass in the permutation based p-value distribution below or above the value of the test statistic.