Cargando…

Comparative genomics of parasitic silkworm microsporidia reveal an association between genome expansion and host adaptation

BACKGROUND: Microsporidian Nosema bombycis has received much attention because the pébrine disease of domesticated silkworms results in great economic losses in the silkworm industry. So far, no effective treatment could be found for pébrine. Compared to other known Nosema parasites, N. bombycis can...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pan, Guoqing, Xu, Jinshan, Li, Tian, Xia, Qingyou, Liu, Shao-Lun, Zhang, Guojie, Li, Songgang, Li, Chunfeng, Liu, Handeng, Yang, Liu, Liu, Tie, Zhang, Xi, Wu, Zhengli, Fan, Wei, Dang, Xiaoqun, Xiang, Heng, Tao, Meilin, Li, Yanhong, Hu, Junhua, Li, Zhi, Lin, Lipeng, Luo, Jie, Geng, Lina, Wang, LinLing, Long, Mengxian, Wan, Yongji, He, Ningjia, Zhang, Ze, Lu, Cheng, Keeling, Patrick J, Wang, Jun, Xiang, Zhonghuai, Zhou, Zeyang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3614468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23496955
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-14-186
_version_ 1782264846351335424
author Pan, Guoqing
Xu, Jinshan
Li, Tian
Xia, Qingyou
Liu, Shao-Lun
Zhang, Guojie
Li, Songgang
Li, Chunfeng
Liu, Handeng
Yang, Liu
Liu, Tie
Zhang, Xi
Wu, Zhengli
Fan, Wei
Dang, Xiaoqun
Xiang, Heng
Tao, Meilin
Li, Yanhong
Hu, Junhua
Li, Zhi
Lin, Lipeng
Luo, Jie
Geng, Lina
Wang, LinLing
Long, Mengxian
Wan, Yongji
He, Ningjia
Zhang, Ze
Lu, Cheng
Keeling, Patrick J
Wang, Jun
Xiang, Zhonghuai
Zhou, Zeyang
author_facet Pan, Guoqing
Xu, Jinshan
Li, Tian
Xia, Qingyou
Liu, Shao-Lun
Zhang, Guojie
Li, Songgang
Li, Chunfeng
Liu, Handeng
Yang, Liu
Liu, Tie
Zhang, Xi
Wu, Zhengli
Fan, Wei
Dang, Xiaoqun
Xiang, Heng
Tao, Meilin
Li, Yanhong
Hu, Junhua
Li, Zhi
Lin, Lipeng
Luo, Jie
Geng, Lina
Wang, LinLing
Long, Mengxian
Wan, Yongji
He, Ningjia
Zhang, Ze
Lu, Cheng
Keeling, Patrick J
Wang, Jun
Xiang, Zhonghuai
Zhou, Zeyang
author_sort Pan, Guoqing
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Microsporidian Nosema bombycis has received much attention because the pébrine disease of domesticated silkworms results in great economic losses in the silkworm industry. So far, no effective treatment could be found for pébrine. Compared to other known Nosema parasites, N. bombycis can unusually parasitize a broad range of hosts. To gain some insights into the underlying genetic mechanism of pathological ability and host range expansion in this parasite, a comparative genomic approach is conducted. The genome of two Nosema parasites, N. bombycis and N. antheraeae (an obligatory parasite to undomesticated silkworms Antheraea pernyi), were sequenced and compared with their distantly related species, N. ceranae (an obligatory parasite to honey bees). RESULTS: Our comparative genomics analysis show that the N. bombycis genome has greatly expanded due to the following three molecular mechanisms: 1) the proliferation of host-derived transposable elements, 2) the acquisition of many horizontally transferred genes from bacteria, and 3) the production of abundnant gene duplications. To our knowledge, duplicated genes derived not only from small-scale events (e.g., tandem duplications) but also from large-scale events (e.g., segmental duplications) have never been seen so abundant in any reported microsporidia genomes. Our relative dating analysis further indicated that these duplication events have arisen recently over very short evolutionary time. Furthermore, several duplicated genes involving in the cytotoxic metabolic pathway were found to undergo positive selection, suggestive of the role of duplicated genes on the adaptive evolution of pathogenic ability. CONCLUSIONS: Genome expansion is rarely considered as the evolutionary outcome acting on those highly reduced and compact parasitic microsporidian genomes. This study, for the first time, demonstrates that the parasitic genomes can expand, instead of shrink, through several common molecular mechanisms such as gene duplication, horizontal gene transfer, and transposable element expansion. We also showed that the duplicated genes can serve as raw materials for evolutionary innovations possibly contributing to the increase of pathologenic ability. Based on our research, we propose that duplicated genes of N. bombycis should be treated as primary targets for treatment designs against pébrine.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3614468
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-36144682013-04-03 Comparative genomics of parasitic silkworm microsporidia reveal an association between genome expansion and host adaptation Pan, Guoqing Xu, Jinshan Li, Tian Xia, Qingyou Liu, Shao-Lun Zhang, Guojie Li, Songgang Li, Chunfeng Liu, Handeng Yang, Liu Liu, Tie Zhang, Xi Wu, Zhengli Fan, Wei Dang, Xiaoqun Xiang, Heng Tao, Meilin Li, Yanhong Hu, Junhua Li, Zhi Lin, Lipeng Luo, Jie Geng, Lina Wang, LinLing Long, Mengxian Wan, Yongji He, Ningjia Zhang, Ze Lu, Cheng Keeling, Patrick J Wang, Jun Xiang, Zhonghuai Zhou, Zeyang BMC Genomics Research Article BACKGROUND: Microsporidian Nosema bombycis has received much attention because the pébrine disease of domesticated silkworms results in great economic losses in the silkworm industry. So far, no effective treatment could be found for pébrine. Compared to other known Nosema parasites, N. bombycis can unusually parasitize a broad range of hosts. To gain some insights into the underlying genetic mechanism of pathological ability and host range expansion in this parasite, a comparative genomic approach is conducted. The genome of two Nosema parasites, N. bombycis and N. antheraeae (an obligatory parasite to undomesticated silkworms Antheraea pernyi), were sequenced and compared with their distantly related species, N. ceranae (an obligatory parasite to honey bees). RESULTS: Our comparative genomics analysis show that the N. bombycis genome has greatly expanded due to the following three molecular mechanisms: 1) the proliferation of host-derived transposable elements, 2) the acquisition of many horizontally transferred genes from bacteria, and 3) the production of abundnant gene duplications. To our knowledge, duplicated genes derived not only from small-scale events (e.g., tandem duplications) but also from large-scale events (e.g., segmental duplications) have never been seen so abundant in any reported microsporidia genomes. Our relative dating analysis further indicated that these duplication events have arisen recently over very short evolutionary time. Furthermore, several duplicated genes involving in the cytotoxic metabolic pathway were found to undergo positive selection, suggestive of the role of duplicated genes on the adaptive evolution of pathogenic ability. CONCLUSIONS: Genome expansion is rarely considered as the evolutionary outcome acting on those highly reduced and compact parasitic microsporidian genomes. This study, for the first time, demonstrates that the parasitic genomes can expand, instead of shrink, through several common molecular mechanisms such as gene duplication, horizontal gene transfer, and transposable element expansion. We also showed that the duplicated genes can serve as raw materials for evolutionary innovations possibly contributing to the increase of pathologenic ability. Based on our research, we propose that duplicated genes of N. bombycis should be treated as primary targets for treatment designs against pébrine. BioMed Central 2013-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3614468/ /pubmed/23496955 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-14-186 Text en Copyright © 2013 Pan 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
Pan, Guoqing
Xu, Jinshan
Li, Tian
Xia, Qingyou
Liu, Shao-Lun
Zhang, Guojie
Li, Songgang
Li, Chunfeng
Liu, Handeng
Yang, Liu
Liu, Tie
Zhang, Xi
Wu, Zhengli
Fan, Wei
Dang, Xiaoqun
Xiang, Heng
Tao, Meilin
Li, Yanhong
Hu, Junhua
Li, Zhi
Lin, Lipeng
Luo, Jie
Geng, Lina
Wang, LinLing
Long, Mengxian
Wan, Yongji
He, Ningjia
Zhang, Ze
Lu, Cheng
Keeling, Patrick J
Wang, Jun
Xiang, Zhonghuai
Zhou, Zeyang
Comparative genomics of parasitic silkworm microsporidia reveal an association between genome expansion and host adaptation
title Comparative genomics of parasitic silkworm microsporidia reveal an association between genome expansion and host adaptation
title_full Comparative genomics of parasitic silkworm microsporidia reveal an association between genome expansion and host adaptation
title_fullStr Comparative genomics of parasitic silkworm microsporidia reveal an association between genome expansion and host adaptation
title_full_unstemmed Comparative genomics of parasitic silkworm microsporidia reveal an association between genome expansion and host adaptation
title_short Comparative genomics of parasitic silkworm microsporidia reveal an association between genome expansion and host adaptation
title_sort comparative genomics of parasitic silkworm microsporidia reveal an association between genome expansion and host adaptation
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3614468/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23496955
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2164-14-186
work_keys_str_mv AT panguoqing comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT xujinshan comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT litian comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT xiaqingyou comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT liushaolun comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT zhangguojie comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT lisonggang comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT lichunfeng comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT liuhandeng comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT yangliu comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT liutie comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT zhangxi comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT wuzhengli comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT fanwei comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT dangxiaoqun comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT xiangheng comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT taomeilin comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT liyanhong comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT hujunhua comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT lizhi comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT linlipeng comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT luojie comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT genglina comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT wanglinling comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT longmengxian comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT wanyongji comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT heningjia comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT zhangze comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT lucheng comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT keelingpatrickj comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT wangjun comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT xiangzhonghuai comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation
AT zhouzeyang comparativegenomicsofparasiticsilkwormmicrosporidiarevealanassociationbetweengenomeexpansionandhostadaptation