| Literature DB >> 34294116 |
Emily K Herman1,2, Alex Greninger3,4, Mark van der Giezen5, Michael L Ginger6, Inmaculada Ramirez-Macias7,8, Haylea C Miller9,10, Matthew J Morgan11, Anastasios D Tsaousis12, Katrina Velle13, Romana Vargová14, Kristína Záhonová7,15,16, Sebastian Rodrigo Najle17,18, Georgina MacIntyre19, Norbert Muller20, Mattias Wittwer21, Denise C Zysset-Burri22, Marek Eliáš14, Claudio H Slamovits23, Matthew T Weirauch24,25, Lillian Fritz-Laylin13, Francine Marciano-Cabral26, Geoffrey J Puzon9, Tom Walsh11, Charles Chiu3, Joel B Dacks27,28,29.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The opportunistic pathogen Naegleria fowleri establishes infection in the human brain, killing almost invariably within 2 weeks. The amoeba performs piece-meal ingestion, or trogocytosis, of brain material causing direct tissue damage and massive inflammation. The cellular basis distinguishing N. fowleri from other Naegleria species, which are all non-pathogenic, is not known. Yet, with the geographic range of N. fowleri advancing, potentially due to climate change, understanding how this pathogen invades and kills is both important and timely.Entities:
Keywords: Cytoskeleton; Genome sequence; Illumina; Inter-strain diversity; Lysosomal; Metabolism; Neuropathogenic; Protease; RNA-Seq
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34294116 PMCID: PMC8296547 DOI: 10.1186/s12915-021-01078-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Biol ISSN: 1741-7007 Impact factor: 7.431
Fig. 1Infection of humans by Naegleria fowleri. (a) N. fowleri is found in warm fresh waters, (b) living primarily as an amoeboid trophozoite but also showing flagellate and cyst forms. If water containing N. fowleri enters the human nose (c), the trophozoite can opportunistically infect. (d) After passing through the cribriform plate (light-brown) (e), the amoeba phagocytoses brain material in a process of piece-meal ingestion called trogocytosis. (f) While treatable by a therapeutic cocktail if detected early, N. fowleri infection has an ~ 97% death rate
Assembly statistics for N. fowleri strains V212, 986, and ATCC 30863
| Number of scaffolds | 1859 | 990 | 1124 |
| Total size of scaffolds | 27,711,821 | 27,495,188 | 29,619,856 |
| Longest scaffold | 387,133 | 390,775 | 471,424 |
| Mean scaffold size | 14,907 | 2354 | 26,352 |
| N50 | 92,316 | 101,682 | 136,406 |
| L50 | 86 | 83 | 63 |
| Number of contigs | 1962 | 1919 | 2530 |
| Total size of contigs | 27,703,916 | 27,397,881 | 28,636,847 |
| Longest contig | 372,317 | 272,583 | 236,403 |
| Mean contig size | 14,120 | 14,277 | 11,319 |
| N50 | 86,051 | 45,674 | 38,800 |
| L50 | 93 | 182 | 213 |
| BUSCO complete | 88.3% | 87.9% | 87.8% |
| BUSCO single copy | 76.9% | 76.5% | 73.7% |
| BUSCO duplicate | 11.4% | 11.4% | 14.1% |
| BUSCO fragmented | 2.4% | 3.1% | 2.7% |
| BUSCO missing | 9.3% | 9.0% | 9.5% |
Genome statistics for N. fowleri strains V212, 986, 30863, and N. gruberi strain NEG-M
| Total genome size | 27.7 Mbp | 27.5 Mbp | 29.62 Mbp | 41.0 Mbp |
| GC content | 36% | 36% | 35% | 33% |
| Number of genes | 12,677 | 11,599 | 11,499 | 15,708 |
| Average gene length | 1785 bp | 1955 bp | 1984 bp | 1677 bp |
| Exons/gene | 2 | 2 | 2 | 1.7 |
| Average exon length | 777 bp | 849 bp | 825 bp | 894 bp |
| % coding | 71.35% | 73.01% | 70.79% | 57.80% |
| Average intron length | 126 bp | 138 bp | 144 bp | 203 bp |
Fig. 2Genome and transcriptome conservation across Naegleria species. a Result of OrthoMCL analysis showing the number of orthogroups shared between the three N. fowleri strains and N. gruberi. The number of in-paralogue groups within each species is also shown (whereas strain-specific singletons are omitted from the diagram). The value 458 shown within the intersection of the three N. fowleri strains to the exclusion of N. gruberi is the number of orthogroups that did not retrieve any clear homolog in N. gruberi in a manual BLAST search. b Transcripts in the N. fowleri LEE transcriptome that share sequence similarity with genes in other Naegleria genomes based on BLAST analysis. Sequences with shared similarity are not considered to be necessarily orthologous
Fig. 3Mouse-passaged N. fowleri shows upregulated enzymes producing neuroactive chemicals. Upregulation of enzymes of glutamate metabolism in mouse-passaged LEE N. fowleri suggests a strategy for ATP production in vivo and synthesis of neuroactive metabolites
Fig. 4Venn diagram showing the overlap between differentially expressed genes in mouse-passaged N. fowleri, those which have no clear homologs in N. gruberi, and those of unknown function
Fig. 5Model of N. fowleri pathogenicity. Aspects of cellular function that are likely relevant to N. fowleri pathogenicity are indicated on the cartoon of high-pathogenicity N. fowleri (right), as compared with low pathogenicity N. fowleri (left). This model does not represent an exhaustive list of all identified pathogenicity factors, but rather maps the system-level changes in N. fowleri based on the results of our differential gene expression analysis