| Literature DB >> 29384366 |
Nathaniel G Jones1, Carolina M C Catta-Preta1, Ana Paula C A Lima2, Jeremy C Mottram1.
Abstract
There has been a very limited number of high-throughput screening campaigns carried out with Leishmania drug targets. In part, this is due to the small number of suitable target genes that have been shown by genetic or chemical methods to be essential for the parasite. In this perspective, we discuss the state of genetic target validation in the field of Leishmania research and review the 200 Leishmania genes and 36 Trypanosoma cruzi genes for which gene deletion attempts have been made since the first published case in 1990. We define a quality score for the different genetic deletion techniques that can be used to identify potential drug targets. We also discuss how the advances in genome-scale gene disruption techniques have been used to assist target-based and phenotypic-based drug development in other parasitic protozoa and why Leishmania has lacked a similar approach so far. The prospects for this scale of work are considered in the context of the application of CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing as a useful tool in Leishmania.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR/Cas9; Leishmania; Trypanosoma cruzi; drug discovery; gene knockouts; null; pathogen; target validation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29384366 PMCID: PMC5902788 DOI: 10.1021/acsinfecdis.7b00244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Infect Dis ISSN: 2373-8227 Impact factor: 5.084
Definitions of Key Terms
| term | definition | synonym |
|---|---|---|
| allele | This is a variant form of a gene. For diploid chromosomes, there are two alleles in the nuclear DNA (if identical, these are homozygous; if different, these are heterozygous). Additional alleles or copies of a gene can be complemented on an episome or integrated into the nuclear DNA in wild-type, mutant, or floxed forms. | |
| gene deletion by double homologous replacement | An allele of a gene is replaced by a drug resistance marker, resulting in deletion of the coding DNA sequence of the allele. This is performed twice, in sequential steps, with two different drug resistance markers to result in the replacement of two alleles of a gene, yielding a null mutant if the gene is not essential. | knockout (verb) |
| null mutant | This is a parasite strain that lacks both alleles of a gene of interest after a deletion strategy. | knockout (noun) |
| facilitated null mutant | Both chromosomal alleles can be deleted, but this requires prior genetic (episomal allele) or nutritional supplementation. | episomal rescue, conditional null mutant |
| unforced plasmid shuffle | Drug selection for a plasmid episome that complements a chromosomal null mutant is removed, and the loss or retention of this plasmid is analyzed. | plasmid cure |
| forced plasmid shuffle | The complementing plasmid episome contains both a positive and negative selectable marker, which allows a selection pressure to be imposed to favor parasites that lose the episome. | |
| inducible gene deletion | A parasite line is engineered to contain an allele that can be removed by the addition of a trigger, for example, the rapamycin-induced DiCre recombinase deletion of a floxed allele. | |
| floxed | Flanked by the | |
| complementation | This involves the restoration of null mutants by the addition of an extra allele of the gene of interest (episomally or genomically) or by the addition of a nutritional supplement in the case of a gene that encodes a metabolic enzyme. | add back |
| episome | A circular DNA molecule that can be replicated independently of the nuclear or kinetoplast DNA. | plasmid |
Figure 1Overview of techniques that can be used for genetic target validation in Leishmania. (a) Gene deletion by homologous replacement. Drug resistance markers are targeted to the gene of interest by long homology flanks (0.5–1 kb) in sequential transfections by electroporation. This process can now be facilitated using CRISPR/Cas9 and short homology flanked cassettes in a single transfection. Deletions targeting essential genes will result in cell death and failure to isolate null mutants or in ploidy changes that allow the cell to retain alleles of the wild-type locus as well as drug resistance markers. (b) Facilitated null mutant with unforced plasmid shuffle. An episome expressing the gene of interest is first transfected into the cell line or a nutritional supplement is provided, allowing it to survive the subsequent deletion of the chromosomal alleles of the gene of interest. The drug selection pressure for the episome can be removed and retention of the plasmid can be determined if the gene is not essential; then it will be possible to isolate parasites that lack the episome. (c) Forced plasmid shuffle. As in B, an episome expressing the gene of interest is transfected into the parasite to allow the deletion of the chromosomal alleles of the target gene. The episome also encodes a negative-selectable marker, herpes simplex virus thymidine kinase. Selection with ganciclovir favors the survival of parasites that lack the episome, so if a gene is nonessential, the episome will rapidly be lost from the population but will be retained for an essential gene despite the associated costs. The addition of a second episome containing mutant versions of the gene of interest allows for exploration of the roles of specific domains and residues in the encoded protein for correct gene function by assessing which plasmid of the two is preferentially retained. (d) DiCre inducible gene deletion. One allele of the target gene is replaced by a drug-selectable cassette containing a “floxed” allele, and in a second transfection stage, the remaining allele is replaced by a second drug resistance marker. The addition of rapamycin induces DiCre dimerization and excision of the floxed allele, and the phenotypes that emerge in the induced null mutants can then be analyzed. As in C, complementation allows for the assessment of null mutant specificity and functional assessment of defined domains or residues in the protein. In all panels, the number of stars indicate the quality of the genetic evidence for gene essentiality, with one star being the weakest and five stars being the strongest.
Figure 2Overview of the number of Leishmania genes with published attempts at the creation of a null mutant. (a) Line graph depicting the cumulative number of genes for which attempts have been made to generate null mutants, for human infective Leishmania species. Only the first attempt at a gene deletion for each individual gene was recorded. Data from this study were ordered by year, and cumulative values of publications per year were derived, where the total number of attempted gene deletions is shown as well as the number of essential genes identified. (b) Pie chart showing the proportion of unique gene deletion attempts by species of Leishmania. Cutaneous species are shaded in yellows, and visceral species, in blues.
Figure 3REVIGO analysis of GO terms associated with targeted Leishmania genes. L. major orthologues for all gene IDs in Table S1 were used to recover the associated GO terms for biological processes. The number of occurrences of each GO term was used to weight a REVIGO analysis, depicted as larger circles and hotter colors. The more frequently occurring biological processes are annotated in the figure, as are key (but less frequent) GO terms such as N-terminal protein myristoylation.
Figure 4Number of reverse genetic manipulations of Leishmania in comparison to other model parasitic protozoans. (A) Comparison of reverse genetic screening in Leishmania spp. (Table S1), Trypanosoma cruzi (Table S2), Trypanosoma brucei,[59]Toxoplasma gondii,[60] and Plasmodium berghei.[67] Pie chart segments depict the proportion of genes in each organism that have been targeted using reverse genetics, with the overall area of the pie depicting the relative sizes of the genomes.
Scoring System to Assess the Quality of Evidence for Target Essentiality by Gene Deletion Techniques
| quality score | definition | issues | number | genes | number | genes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| * | failure of attempt to perform gene deletion by double homologous replacement | changes in ploidy indicative of essentiality; may be a technical failure | 30 | 15 | ||
| facilitated null mutant; gene of interest is complemented with an episome or nutritional supplement, allowing genomic alleles to be deleted | shows the gene locus can be targeted for deletion | 20 | 1 | |||
| unforced plasmid shuffle; plasmid retained in the absence of antibiotic selection | indirect evidence for a gene being essential; best carried out in vivo | 12 | ||||
| forced plasmid shuffle or DiCre inducible deletion | death of parasite after induction used as evidence of essentiality | 2 | ||||
| as above but with analysis in amastigote stages and/or the mouse model | application to amastigotes provides best evidence for essentiality in vivo | 1 | ||||