| Literature DB >> 30283743 |
Laura Piel1,2, Pascale Pescher1, Gerald F Späth1.
Abstract
Leishmania biomarker discovery remains an important challenge that needs to be revisited in light of our increasing knowledge on parasite-specific biology, notably its genome instability. In the absence of classical transcriptional regulation in these early-branching eukaryotes, fluctuations in transcript abundance can be generated by gene and chromosome amplifications, which have been linked to parasite phenotypic variability with respect to virulence, tissue tropism, and drug resistance. Conducting in vitro evolutionary experiments to study mechanisms of Leishmania environmental adaptation, we recently validated the link between parasite genetic amplification and fitness gain, thus defining gene and chromosome copy number variations (CNVs) as important Leishmania biomarkers. These experiments also demonstrated that long-term Leishmania culture adaptation can strongly interfere with epidemiologically relevant, genetic signals, which challenges current protocols for biomarker discovery, all of which rely on in vitro expansion of clinical isolates. Here we propose an experimental framework independent of long-term culture termed "reverse" epidemiology, which applies established protocols for functional genetic screening of cosmid-transfected parasites in animal models for the identification of clinically relevant genetic loci that then inform targeted field studies for their validation as Leishmania biomarkers.Entities:
Keywords: Leishmania; biomarker discovery; cosmid screen; functional genetics; reverse epidemiology
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30283743 PMCID: PMC6157315 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2018.00325
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Genes identified by cosmid-based approach potentially linked to Leishmania pathogenicity.
| lpg1 | LmjF.25.0010 | 25 | Beta galactofuranosyl transferase | Galactofuranosyl transferase implicated in LPG biosynthesis | Ryan et al., | Yes (Späth et al., | |
| lpg2 | LmjF.34.3120 | 34 | Lipophosphoglycan biosynthetic protein 2 | Transmembrane transporter activity | Descoteaux et al., | Yes (Späth et al., | |
| sca2 | LmjF.02.0180 | 2 | Phosphoglycan beta 1,2 arabinosyltransferase | Galactosyltransferase activity | Dobson et al., | No | |
| sca1 | LmjF.02.0220 | 2 | Phosphoglycan beta 1,2 arabinosyltransferase | Galactosyltransferase activity | Dobson et al., | No | |
| scg1 | LmjF.07.1170 | 7 | Phosphoglycan beta 1,3 galactosyltransferase 1 | Galactosyltransferase activity | Dobson et al., | No | |
| scg2 | LmjF.21.0010 | 21 | Phosphoglycan beta 1,3 galactosyltransferase 2 | Galactosyltransferase activity | Dobson et al., | No | |
| scg3 | LmjF.02.0010 | 2 | Phosphoglycan beta 1,3 galactosyltransferase 3 | Galactosyltransferase activity | Dobson et al., | No | |
| scg4 | LmjF.36.0010 | 36 | phosphoglycan beta 1,3 galactosyltransferase 4 | Galactosyltransferase activity | Dobson et al., | No | |
| scg5 | LmjF.31.3190 | 31 | phosphoglycan beta 1,3 galactosyltransferase 5 | Galactosyltransferase activity | Dobson et al., | No | |
| scg6 | LmjF.25.2460 | 25 | Phosphoglycan beta 1,3 galactosyltransferase 6 | Galactosyltransferase activity | Dobson et al., | No | |
| Miniexon | 36 | Miniexon | Zhang and Matlashewski, | No | |||
| P46 | LmjF.33.3060 | 33 | 46 kD virulence factor | Unknown | Reiling et al., | No | |
| LmJF36.0790 - LmjF.36.0840 | 36 | Specific genes involved in phenotype not identified | Not applicable | Dahlin-Laborde et al., | No | ||
| LmJF36.0840 - LmjF.36.0900 | 36 | Specific genes involved in phenotype not identified | Not applicable | Dahlin-Laborde et al., | No | ||
| LmJF36.3090 - LmjF.36.3210 | 36 | Specific genes involved in phenotype not identified | Not applicable | Dahlin-Laborde et al., | No |
chr, chromosome;
validation refers to loss of function studies establishing a direct link between the gene and parasite pathogenicity.
Genes identified by cosmid-based approach linked to Leishmania drug resistance or susceptibility.
| TRP | LmjF.31.2010 | Turbicidin-resistant protein | ER protein | Tubercidin | No | Cotrim et al., | |
| bt1 | LmxM.34.5150 | Biopterin transporter | Folate/biopterin transport | Methotrexate | No | Kundig et al., | |
| SQS1 | LmjF.31.2940 | Squalene synthase | Ergosterol biosynth | Itraconazole | No | Cotrim et al., | |
| ARM58 | LbrM20.0210; LinJ.34.0220 | 58 kDa antimony resistance marker | Response to drug | SbIII | No | Nühs et al., | |
| ARM56 | LinJ.34.0210 | 56 kDa antimony resistance marker | Response to drug | SbIII | No | Nühs et al., | |
| HSP23 | LinJ.34.0230 | HSP 23 | Response to drug | No | Tejera Nevado et al., | ||
| P299 | LinJ.08.0630 | P299 | Response to drug | Miltefosine/ SbIII | Partially Downing et al., | Choudhury et al., | |
| CLrP | LinJ.34.0570 | Cysteine leucine rich protein | Response to drug | SbIII | Partially (Kumar et al., | Genest et al., | |
| LdMT | LdBPK_131590.1 | Miltefosine transporter | Phospholipid-translocating ATPase | Miltefosine | Partially (Coelho et al., | Perez-Victoria et al., | |
| LinJ.34.2310 | Phosphatase 2C-like proteins | Catalytic activity | Methotrexate | No | Gazanion et al., | ||
| LinJ.34.2320 | Phosphatase 2C-like proteins | Catalytic activity | Methotrexate | No | Gazanion et al., | ||
| LinJ.06.1010 | Leucine Rich Repeat, putative | Protein binding | Pentamidin/ paromomycin | No | Gazanion et al., | ||
| LinJ.12.0610 | Serine/threonine phosphatase | Hydrolase activity and ion binding | SbIII | No | Gazanion et al., | ||
| LinJ30.2270 | Phospholipid-translocating ATPase | Transmembrane transporter | Miltefosine | No | Gazanion et al., | ||
| LinJ.29.2250 | C-8 sterol isomerase | Isomerase | Miltefosine | No | Gazanion et al., |
Strain used for the generation of the cosmid library;
biological validation in field isolates
Figure 1Outline of the reverse epidemiology framework. Field isolates from infected humans or animal reservoirs showing a defined difference in clinical phenotype (e.g., drug susceptibility) will be briefly expanded in culture, a cosmid library will be generated from the donor strain (in red) that shows the phenotype of interest (e.g., drug resistance), which then will be transfected into the recipient strain (in blue) that will be subjected to a gain-of-function screen in situ using experimental mouse or hamster infection (in the presence of drug in our example). The selected gene(s) of interested (GOI) will be identified by next generation sequencing (NGS). Correlating the identified genes with the clinical phenotype in dedicated epidemiological studies will then validate the new biomarker.