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A2 gene of Old World cutaneous Leishmania is a single highly conserved functional gene

BACKGROUND: Leishmaniases are among the most proteiform parasitic infections in humans ranging from unapparent to cutaneous, mucocutaneous or visceral diseases. The various clinical issues depend on complex and still poorly understood mechanisms where both host and parasite factors are interacting....

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Autores principales: Garin, Yves JF, Meneceur, Pascale, Pratlong, Francine, Dedet, Jean-Pierre, Derouin, Francis, Lorenzo, Frédéric
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2005
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1274274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15794817
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-5-18
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author Garin, Yves JF
Meneceur, Pascale
Pratlong, Francine
Dedet, Jean-Pierre
Derouin, Francis
Lorenzo, Frédéric
author_facet Garin, Yves JF
Meneceur, Pascale
Pratlong, Francine
Dedet, Jean-Pierre
Derouin, Francis
Lorenzo, Frédéric
author_sort Garin, Yves JF
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Leishmaniases are among the most proteiform parasitic infections in humans ranging from unapparent to cutaneous, mucocutaneous or visceral diseases. The various clinical issues depend on complex and still poorly understood mechanisms where both host and parasite factors are interacting. Among the candidate factors of parasite virulence are the A2 genes, a family of multiple genes that are developmentally expressed in species of the Leishmania donovani group responsible for visceral diseases (VL). By contrast, in L. major determining cutaneous infections (CL) we showed that A2 genes are present in a truncated form only. Furthermore, the A2 genomic sequences of L. major were considered subsequently to represent non-expressed pseudogenes [1]. Consequently, it was suggested that the structural and functional properties of A2 genes could play a role in the differential tropism of CL and VL leishmanias. On this basis, it was of importance to determine whether the observed structural/functional particularities of the L. major A2 genes were shared by other CL Leishmania, therefore representing a proper characteristic of CL A2 genes as opposed to those of VL isolates. METHODS: In the present study we amplified by PCR and sequenced the A2 genes from genomic DNA and from clonal libraries of the four Old World CL species comparatively to a clonal population of L. infantum VL parasites. Using RT-PCR we also amplified and sequenced A2 mRNA transcripts from L. major. RESULTS: A unique A2 sequence was identified in Old World cutaneous Leishmania by sequencing. The shared sequence was highly conserved among the various CL strains and species analysed, showing a single polymorphism C/G at position 58. The CL A2 gene was found to be functionally transcribed at both parasite stages. CONCLUSION: The present study shows that cutaneous strains of leishmania share a conserved functional A2 gene. As opposed to the multiple A2 genes described in VL isolates, the CL A2 gene is unique, lacking most of the nucleotide repeats that constitute the variable region at the 5'end of the VL A2 sequences. As the variable region of the VL A2 gene has been shown to correspond to a portion of the protein which is highly immunogenic, the present results support the hypothesis of a possible role of the A2 gene in the differential tropism of CL and VL leishmania parasites.
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spelling pubmed-12742742005-10-29 A2 gene of Old World cutaneous Leishmania is a single highly conserved functional gene Garin, Yves JF Meneceur, Pascale Pratlong, Francine Dedet, Jean-Pierre Derouin, Francis Lorenzo, Frédéric BMC Infect Dis Research Article BACKGROUND: Leishmaniases are among the most proteiform parasitic infections in humans ranging from unapparent to cutaneous, mucocutaneous or visceral diseases. The various clinical issues depend on complex and still poorly understood mechanisms where both host and parasite factors are interacting. Among the candidate factors of parasite virulence are the A2 genes, a family of multiple genes that are developmentally expressed in species of the Leishmania donovani group responsible for visceral diseases (VL). By contrast, in L. major determining cutaneous infections (CL) we showed that A2 genes are present in a truncated form only. Furthermore, the A2 genomic sequences of L. major were considered subsequently to represent non-expressed pseudogenes [1]. Consequently, it was suggested that the structural and functional properties of A2 genes could play a role in the differential tropism of CL and VL leishmanias. On this basis, it was of importance to determine whether the observed structural/functional particularities of the L. major A2 genes were shared by other CL Leishmania, therefore representing a proper characteristic of CL A2 genes as opposed to those of VL isolates. METHODS: In the present study we amplified by PCR and sequenced the A2 genes from genomic DNA and from clonal libraries of the four Old World CL species comparatively to a clonal population of L. infantum VL parasites. Using RT-PCR we also amplified and sequenced A2 mRNA transcripts from L. major. RESULTS: A unique A2 sequence was identified in Old World cutaneous Leishmania by sequencing. The shared sequence was highly conserved among the various CL strains and species analysed, showing a single polymorphism C/G at position 58. The CL A2 gene was found to be functionally transcribed at both parasite stages. CONCLUSION: The present study shows that cutaneous strains of leishmania share a conserved functional A2 gene. As opposed to the multiple A2 genes described in VL isolates, the CL A2 gene is unique, lacking most of the nucleotide repeats that constitute the variable region at the 5'end of the VL A2 sequences. As the variable region of the VL A2 gene has been shown to correspond to a portion of the protein which is highly immunogenic, the present results support the hypothesis of a possible role of the A2 gene in the differential tropism of CL and VL leishmania parasites. BioMed Central 2005-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC1274274/ /pubmed/15794817 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-5-18 Text en Copyright © 2005 Garin et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Garin, Yves JF
Meneceur, Pascale
Pratlong, Francine
Dedet, Jean-Pierre
Derouin, Francis
Lorenzo, Frédéric
A2 gene of Old World cutaneous Leishmania is a single highly conserved functional gene
title A2 gene of Old World cutaneous Leishmania is a single highly conserved functional gene
title_full A2 gene of Old World cutaneous Leishmania is a single highly conserved functional gene
title_fullStr A2 gene of Old World cutaneous Leishmania is a single highly conserved functional gene
title_full_unstemmed A2 gene of Old World cutaneous Leishmania is a single highly conserved functional gene
title_short A2 gene of Old World cutaneous Leishmania is a single highly conserved functional gene
title_sort a2 gene of old world cutaneous leishmania is a single highly conserved functional gene
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1274274/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15794817
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-5-18
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