| Literature DB >> 33042874 |
Ben J Mans1,2,3.
Abstract
Species have definitive genomes. Even so, the transcriptional and translational products of the genome are dynamic and subject to change over time. This is especially true for the proteins secreted by ticks at the tick-host feeding interface that represent a complex system known as the sialoverse. The sialoverse represent all of the proteins derived from tick salivary glands for all tick species that may be involved in tick-host interaction and the modulation of the host's defense mechanisms. The current study contemplates the advances made over time to understand and describe the complexity present in the sialoverse. Technological advances at given periods in time allowed detection of functions, genes, and proteins enabling a deeper insight into the complexity of the sialoverse and a concomitant expansion in complexity with as yet, no end in sight. The importance of systematic classification of the sialoverse is highlighted with the realization that our coverage of transcriptome and proteome space remains incomplete, but that complete descriptions may be possible in the future. Even so, analysis and integration of the sialoverse into a comprehensive understanding of tick-host interactions may require further technological advances given the high level of expected complexity that remains to be uncovered.Entities:
Keywords: proteome; salivary gland; sialome; sialoverse; tick; transcriptome
Year: 2020 PMID: 33042874 PMCID: PMC7517725 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2020.574405
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Time line to indicate the major technological advances that improved our estimation of complexity of salivary gland proteins.
Statistics for conventional cDNA library sequencing.
| 96 | 27 | 29 | – | – | – | Leboulle et al., | |
| 735 | 410 | 87 | 102 | 19 tick; 2 host | 21.8 | Valenzuela et al., | |
| 3,992 | 2,109 | – | – | – | – | Nene et al., | |
| 19,006 | 7,359 | 19,046 | – | – | – | Nene et al., | |
| 11,590 | 8,270 | – | – | – | – | Guerrero et al., | |
| 1,068 | 557 | 120 | 83 | – | – | Francischetti et al., | |
| 8,150 | 3,020 | 514 | 863 | – | – | Ribeiro et al., | |
| 1,440 | 762 | 1,270 | 239 | – | – | Alarcon-Chaidez et al., | |
| 1,529 | 649 | 158 | 130 | 37 | 23.4 | Francischetti et al., | |
| 1,089 | 726 | 105 | 127 | 39 | 37 | Francischetti et al., | |
| 3,087 | 1,472 | 193 | 127 | 35 | 18.1 | Mans et al., | |
| 1,881 | 1,274 | 511 | 129 | – | – | Chmelar et al., | |
| 6,160 | 4,577 | 141 | 193 | – | – | Aljamali et al., | |
| 2,034 | 1,024 | 217 | 219 | 21 tick; 56 host | 9.7 | Anatriello et al., | |
| 3,992 | 2,077 | 605 | 379 | 170 | 28.0 | Ribeiro et al., | |
| 2,084 | 1,167 | 98 | 255 | 72 tick, 22 host | 73.4 | Francischetti et al., | |
| 1,147 | 923 | 38 | 115 | – | – | Ribeiro et al., | |
| 15,390 | 12,319 | 14,958 | – | – | – | Gibson et al., |
Indicated are the tick species, the number of clones sequenced by Sanger sequencing, the non-redundant clusters obtained after clusterization of sequenced clones, final number of genes submitted to Genbank, the number of secretory proteins detected, the number of tick or host proteins detected using proteomics and the proteomic coverage in percentage of proteins detected relative to the genes submitted to Genbank. Transcriptomes are organized based on publication date.
Statistics for salivary gland transcriptomes assembled using next-generation sequencing technologies.
| 1,626,969 | 190,646 | 72,441 | 15,814 | 7,856 | 3,475 | 4,849 | Karim et al., | |
| 68,144,564 | 272,220 | 82,907 | 34,560 | 19,491 | 10,777 | 8,686 | Schwarz et al., | |
| ~315 million | – | 198,504 | 25,808 | 12,913 | 9,048 | 16,002 | Schwarz et al., | |
| ~435 million | – | 40,490 | 20,773 | – | – | 7,692 | Perner et al., | |
| 104,817 | – | – | 3,796 | 2,653 | 493 | 2,838 | Garcia et al., | |
| 67,677 | – | – | 4,604 | 2,805 | 1,015 | 5,770 | Garcia et al., | |
| 442,756 | – | – | 11,240 | 6,854 | 1,861 | 8,098 | Garcia et al., | |
| 632,267 | 21,797 | – | 21,769 | – | – | – | Mudenda et al., | |
| 344,909,378 | – | – | 5,792 | 3,465 | 2,153 | 3,139 | Karim and Ribeiro, | |
| 241,229,128 | – | – | 50,460 | 11,499 | 7,134 | 11,227 | Tan et al., | |
| 162,912,848 | 70,542 | 55,760 | 54,357 | – | – | – | Xu et al., | |
| ~430 million | 87,688 | 21,410 | 21,410 | 8,237 | 2,135 | 20,175 | de Castro et al., | |
| ~190 million | 140,703 | 23,631 | 23,631 | 8,139 | 2,569 | 21,529 | de Castro et al., | |
| ~567 million | – | – | 9,560 | – | – | 4,246 | Esteves et al., | |
| 197,142,728 | 460,445 | 27,308 | 27,308 | 23,248 | 2,177 | – | Moreira et al., | |
| 138,144,530 | 53,228 | – | 7,875 | 5,511 | 1,796 | 5,337 | Ribeiro et al., | |
| 55,819,366 | 142,391 | – | 15,342 | 8,063 | 1,749 | 142,391 | Bensaoud et al., | |
| 65,035,631 | 134,039 | – | 134,039 | 7,975 | 3,149 | 95,717 | Rodriguez-Valle et al., | |
| ~242 million | 11,903 | – | 11,903 | 7,999 | Martins et al., | |||
| 40,573,988 | Antunes et al., | |||||||
| 22,395,831 | 40,058 | 8,031 | 8,031 | 5,125 | 717 | 6,588 | Araujo et al., | |
| 15,136,406 | – | – | 10,989 | 7,986 | 2,138 | 7,560 | Bourret et al., | |
| 137,653,210 | 235,451 | 71,757 | – | 20 | – | Giachetto et al., |
Indicated are the total reads generated used in assemblies, the total number of contigs obtained after assembly, number of contigs obtained where a coverage or size cutoff was implemented, the number analyzed for annotation, the number identified as house-keeping (HKP) or secretory (SEC). The number of sequences coding for proteins or contigs deposited in Genbank is also indicated.
Summary of proteomic analysis for tick salivary gland proteins using various technologies.
| SGS | Edman | 12 | 13.7 | 87 | 0 | 12 | Valenzuela et al., | |
| SGE | MALDI-MS | 6 | – | 0 | 5 | 2 | Oleaga et al., | |
| SGE | MALDI-MS | 2 | 4.1 | 48 | 0 | 2 | Oleaga et al., | |
| SGE | Edman | 12 | 7.6 | 158 | 0 | 12 | Francischetti et al., | |
| SGE | Edman | 3 | 2.8 | 105 | 0 | 3 | Francischetti et al., | |
| SGE | Edman | 14 | 7.2 | 193 | 0 | 14 | Mans et al., | |
| SGS | 1D-LC-MS | 21 | 9.7 | 217 | 12 | 9 | Oliveira et al., | |
| SGE | 1D-LC-MS | 170 | 28.0 | 605 | 151 | 19 | Ribeiro et al., | |
| SGE | 1D-LC-MS | 72 | 73.4 | 98 | 75 | 23 | Francischetti et al., | |
| SGS | LC-MS | 193 | 257.3 | 75 | 72 | 3 | Díaz-Martín et al., | |
| SGS | LC-MS | 677 | 3.1 | 21,797 | – | – | Mudenda et al., | |
| SGS | 1D-LC-MS | 187 | – | 22,009 | 41 | 145 | Tirloni et al., | |
| SGS | 1D-LC-MS | 135 | – | – | 106 | 29 | Tirloni et al., | |
| SGS | 1D-LC-MS | 582 | – | 62,246 | – | – | Kim et al., | |
| SGS | 1D-LC-MS | 1,182 | – | 110,587 | – | – | Kim et al., |
Protein mixtures analyzed were obtained via induction of salivary gland secretion (SGS) or salivary gland extracts (SGE). Mixtures were analyzed by one-dimensional SDS-PAGE followed by blotting and Edman sequencing (Edman), matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization (MALDI-MS), one-dimensional SDS-PAGE from which bands were cut out for tryptic digest followed by MS/MS analysis (1D-LC-MS), or two-dimensional SDS-PAGE from which bands were cut out for tryptic digest followed by MS/MS analysis (2D-LC-MS), or salivary gland proteins fractionated using liquid chromatography followed by MS/MS (LC-MS).
Figure 2Proteomics of tick transcriptomes. Indicated is the percentage of proteins identified using proteomics relative to the transcriptome database used for identification.
Figure 3BUSCO analysis of tick salivary gland transcriptomes. Indicated are various published tick transcriptomes and their BUSCO analysis. Complete genes were detected as single copies (single) or multiple copies (duplicated). Genes that are fragmented or missing are also reported.