Complete avian malaria parasite genomes reveal features associated with lineage-specific evolution in birds and mammals

Archive ouverte

Böhme, Ulrike | Otto, Thomas | Cotton, James | Steinbiss, Sascha | Sanders, Mandy | Oyola, Samuel | Nicot, Antoine | Gandon, Sylvain | Patra, Kailash | Herd, Colin | Bushell, Ellen | Modrzynska, Katarzyna | Billker, Oliver | Vinetz, Joseph, M | Rivero, Ana, R | Newbold, Chris | Berriman, Matthew

Edité par CCSD ; Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press -

International audience. Avian malaria parasites are prevalent around the world and infect a wide diversity of bird species. Here, we report the se-quencing and analysis of high-quality draft genome sequences for two avian malaria species, Plasmodium relictum and Plasmodium gallinaceum. We identify 50 genes that are specific to avian malaria, located in an otherwise conserved core of the genome that shares gene synteny with all other sequenced malaria genomes. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that the avi-an malaria species form an outgroup to the mammalian Plasmodium species, and using amino acid divergence between species, we estimate the avian-and mammalian-infective lineages diverged in the order of 10 million years ago. Consistent with their phylogenetic position, we identify orthologs of genes that had previously appeared to be restricted to the clades of parasites containing Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax, the species with the greatest impact on human health. From these ortho-logs, we explore differential diversifying selection across the genus and show that the avian lineage is remarkable in the extent to which invasion-related genes are evolving. The subtelomeres of the P. relictum and P. gallinaceum genomes contain several novel gene families, including an expanded surf multigene family. We also identify an expansion of reticulocyte binding protein homologs in P. relictum, and within these proteins, we detect distinct regions that are specific to nonhuman primate , humans, rodent, and avian hosts. For the first time in the Plasmodium lineage, we find evidence of transposable elements, including several hundred fragments of LTR-retrotransposons in both species and an apparently complete LTR-retrotransposon in the genome of P. gallinaceum.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Genomes of all known members of a Plasmodium subgenus reveal paths to virulent human malaria

Archive ouverte | Otto, Thomas | CCSD

International audience

Functional Profiling of a Plasmodium Genome Reveals an Abundance of Essential Genes

Archive ouverte | Bushell, Ellen | CCSD

International audience

Regulators of male and female sexual development are critical for the transmission of a malaria parasite

Archive ouverte | Russell, Andrew J.C. | CCSD

International audience. Malaria transmission to mosquitoes requires a developmental switch in asexually dividing blood-stage parasites to sexual reproduction. In Plasmodium berghei, the transcription factor AP2-G is...

Chargement des enrichissements...