scholarly journals Spatial transcriptomics reveals antiparasitic targets associated with essential behaviors in the human parasite Brugia malayi

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paul M Airs ◽  
Kathy Vaccaro ◽  
Kendra J Gallo ◽  
Nathalie Dinguirard ◽  
Zachary W Heimark ◽  
...  

Lymphatic filariasis (LF) is a chronic debilitating neglected tropical disease (NTD) caused by mosquito-transmitted nematodes that afflicts over 60 million people. Control of LF relies on routine mass drug administration with antiparasitics that clear circulating larval parasites but are ineffective against adults. The development of effective adulticides is hampered by a poor understanding of the processes and tissues driving parasite survival in the host. The adult filariae head region contains essential tissues that control parasite feeding, sensory, secretory, and reproductive behaviors, which express promising molecular substrates for the development of antifilarial drugs, vaccines, and diagnostics. We have adapted spatial transcriptomic approaches to map gene expression patterns across these prioritized but historically intractable head tissues. Spatial and tissue-resolved data reveal distinct biases in the origins of known drug targets and secreted antigens. These data were used to identify potential new drug and vaccine targets, including putative hidden antigens expressed in the alimentary canal, and to spatially associate receptor subunits belonging to druggable families. Spatial transcriptomic approaches provide a powerful resource to aid gene function inference and seed antiparasitic discovery pipelines across helminths of relevance to human and animal health.

2016 ◽  
Vol 113 (8) ◽  
pp. 2080-2085 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hanafy M. Ismail ◽  
Victoria Barton ◽  
Matthew Phanchana ◽  
Sitthivut Charoensutthivarakul ◽  
Michael H. L. Wong ◽  
...  

The artemisinin (ART)-based antimalarials have contributed significantly to reducing global malaria deaths over the past decade, but we still do not know how they kill parasites. To gain greater insight into the potential mechanisms of ART drug action, we developed a suite of ART activity-based protein profiling probes to identify parasite protein drug targets in situ. Probes were designed to retain biological activity and alkylate the molecular target(s) of Plasmodium falciparum 3D7 parasites in situ. Proteins tagged with the ART probe can then be isolated using click chemistry before identification by liquid chromatography–MS/MS. Using these probes, we define an ART proteome that shows alkylated targets in the glycolytic, hemoglobin degradation, antioxidant defense, and protein synthesis pathways, processes essential for parasite survival. This work reveals the pleiotropic nature of the biological functions targeted by this important class of antimalarial drugs.


2001 ◽  
Vol 276 (50) ◽  
pp. 46751-46758 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christophe Grundschober ◽  
Franck Delaunay ◽  
Anja Pühlhofer ◽  
Gerard Triqueneaux ◽  
Vincent Laudet ◽  
...  

Genes under a 24-h regulation period may represent drug targets relevant to diseases involving circadian dysfunctions. As a testing model of the circadian clock system, we have used synchronized rat fibroblasts that are known to express at least six genes in a circadian fashion. We have determined the expression patterns of 9957 transcripts every 4 h over a total period of 76 h using high density oligonucleotide microarrays. The spectral analysis of our mRNA profiling data indicated that ∼2% (85 genes) of all expressed genes followed a robust circadian pattern. We have confirmed the circadian expression of previously known clock or clock-driven genes, and we identified 81 novel circadian genes. The majority of the circadian-regulated gene products are known and are involved in diverse cellular functions. We have classified these circadian genes in seven clusters according to their phase of cycling. Our pathway analysis of the mRNA profiling data strongly suggests a direct link between circadian rhythm and cell cycle.


2012 ◽  
Vol 30 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. e21068-e21068
Author(s):  
Todd A. Hembrough ◽  
Wei-Li Liao ◽  
Sheeno Thyparambil ◽  
Marlene Darfler ◽  
David Krizman ◽  
...  

e21068 Background: The human EGF receptor family (HER’s) consists of two clinically validated drug targets (EGFR and HER2), and two receptors (HER3 and HER4) which are the subject of intensive preclinical and early clinical investigation. Although drugs inhibiting both EGFR and HER2 show significant antitumor activity in the clinic, the acquisition of resistance is a hallmark of these and other targeted therapies. In the case of both targets, one of the emerging resistance mechanisms is the co-expression of other receptor tyrosine kinases, including members of the EGFR superfamily, cMet and IGF1R. As an example, it was recently shown that HER2 co-expression mediates resistance in cetuximab treated head and neck cancer. Similarly, much attention has been paid to HER3 both as a bona fide drug target and a resistance mechanism. Methods: Using trypsin digestion mapping of recombinant proteins, we identified unique peptide sequences from each of these receptors, and built quantitative mass spectrometric (MS) assays which could be multiplexed into a single MS analysis of 1ug of tumor protein. Assays were preclinically validated on 10 formalin fixed cell lines, and FFPE human NSCLC primary tumor xenografts. Results: The validated multiplex assay was used to measure expression levels of HER1-3, cMET and IGF1R in two cohorts of clinical tumor tissue which had been treated with HER family antagonists. One, a set of gefitinib treated NSCLC tumors (N=15) , and a second, a cohort of advanced breast cancer tissues which had adjuvant treatment with trastuzumab(N=18). Here we present expression patterns for each of the RTKs studied, with the intent to begin to define the relationship between RTK expression and response to either gefitinib or trastuzumab treatment. Conclusions: It is important to not only understand primary mechanisms of tumor growth, but also mechanisms of resistance in patients undergoing targeted therapies. Our Liquid Tissue-SRM promises to be a platform which can deliver extremely high sensitivity, absolute specificity as well as multiplexing capabilities to assess critical oncology targets.


Blood ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 124 (21) ◽  
pp. 1056-1056
Author(s):  
Chenyue W Hu ◽  
Steven M. Kornblau ◽  
Alex Bisberg ◽  
Amina A Qutub

Abstract Introduction The heterogeneity of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) remains a great barrier to finding a cure for the disease. Despite our best efforts, the current classification system based on phenotypes and genetic mutations are insufficient to capture and characterize each AML subpopulation. This could result in a mismatch of drugs for a particular patient, an impediment to drug discovery, and an inadequate understanding of AML biology. A promising solution to this challenge is profiling patient samples using proteomics. However, researchers are restricted in their power to fully interpret this massive proteomic data due to a lack of standard AML-tailored computational procedures. In this study, we developed a cocktail of computational methods to analyze the AML proteomic data in conjunction with clinical data. This procedure, Standard Proteomic Analysis (SPA), is designed to help researchers identify unique patient groups, discover prognostic biomarkers, find drug targets and understand transitions between pathway activation states. We applied SPA to a set of AML proteomic data with a focus on hypoxia and angiogenesis to illustrate its utility. Methods The procedure of SPA is shown in Figure 1. We used Prototype Clustering to estimate the optimal number of patient clusters, and used k-means to obtain the cluster assignment for each patient. Standard Kaplan-Meier curve and log-rank tests were performed to examine how patient clustering impacts patient survival, whereas chi-square test was performed to evaluate the association between clinical correlates and the clustering. Principal Component Analysis was used to map the normal samples on top of the patient samples, in order to distinguish normal states from diseased states. To expand searches for drug targets beyond the key proteins, we built a protein network by combining the computationally derived connections from the data using glasso with the experimentally validated connections from public databases (e.g. String and KEGG). All of the results were visualized using an interactive platform Easel, where each patient could be tracked simultaneously across graphs. The example AML proteomic dataset was obtained by assaying 511 new AML patient samples using reverse phase protein array (RPPA). The RPPA was probed with 231 strictly validated antibodies, including antibodies against three hypoxia regulators (HIF1A, VHL, EGLN1) and two angiogenesis regulators (KDR, VASP). The normal bone marrow derived CD34+ cells were used for comparison. Results Using SPA, we first identified four patient clusters with distinct protein expression patterns (Figure 1A). Most patients displayed canonical hypoxic (C3) and non-hypoxic (C2) patterns, featuring high and low HIF1A with opposite expression of the others. The two non-canonical patterns (C1 & C4) indicate a decoupling between HIF1A and its known regulators (e.g., EGLN, VHL) and targets (e.g., KDR). C1 features high HIF1A, EGLN and VHL but low KDR and VASP. C4 is the opposite. The mapping of normal samples to patient samples (Figure 1B) suggested that non-canonical patterns might be disease specific. From the clinical correlates table (Figure 1D), we observed an association between canonical patterns and cell lineage differentiation, with C3 governing undifferentiated FAB M0/M1 cases and C2 dominant in monocytic M4/M5 subtypes. Furthermore, C1 was associated with favorable cytogenetics, but hypoxic patterns (C1 & C3) were adverse factors for overall survival among patients with intermediate cytogenetics (Figure 1C). The expanded protein networks (Figure 1E) revealed an umbrella of proteins in other pathways associated with each of the five proteins, including, e.g. a negative correlation between VASP and apoptosis proteins (BAD, BCL2, AIFM1), which has not been reported before. Conclusions We developed and applied an AML-tailored procedure, SPA, to analyze hypoxia and angiogenesis clinical proteomic data. Using SPA, we were able to identify four AML subpopulations with two disease specific patterns, discover the dependency between cell lineage development and canonical patterns, and explore potential drug targets beyond hypoxia and angiogenesis that are associated with each pattern. We believe SPA could be applied broadly and greatly expedite the drug discovery process in leukemia. Figure 1 Figure 1. Disclosures No relevant conflicts of interest to declare.


2018 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander J. Polino ◽  
S. Nasamu Armiyaw ◽  
Jacquin C. Niles ◽  
Daniel E. Goldberg

AbstractUpon infection of a red blood cell (RBC), the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum drastically remodels its host by exporting hundreds of proteins into the RBC cytosol. This program of protein export is essential for parasite survival, hence there is interest in export-related proteins as potential drug targets. One proposed target is plasmepsin V (PMV), an aspartic protease that cleaves export-destined proteins in the parasite ER at a motif called the Plasmodium export element (PEXEL). This cleavage is essential for effector export across the vacuolar membrane. Despite long-standing interest in PMV, functional studies have been hindered by the failure of current technologies to produce a regulatable lethal depletion of PMV. To overcome this technical barrier, we designed a facile system for stringent post-transcriptional regulation, allowing a tightly controlled, tunable knockdown of PMV. Under maximal knockdown conditions, parasite growth was arrested, validating PMV as essential for parasite survival in RBCs. We found that PMV levels had to be dramatically depleted to affect parasite growth, suggesting that the parasite maintains this enzyme in substantial excess. This has important implications for antimalarial development. Additionally, we found that PMV-depleted parasites arrest immediately after invasion of the host cell, suggesting that PMV has an unappreciated role in early development that is distinct from its previously reported role in protein export in later-stage parasites.ImportanceMalaria is endemic to large swaths of the developing world, causing nearly 500,000 deaths each year. While infection can be treated with antimalarial drugs, resistance continues to emerge to frontline antimalarials, spurring calls for new drugs and targets to feed the drug development pipeline. One proposed target is the aspartic protease plasmepsin V (PMV) that processes exported proteins, enabling the export program that remodels the host cell. This work uses facile genetic tools to produce lethal depletion of PMV, validating it as a drug target and showing that PMV is made in substantial excess in blood-stage parasites. Unexpectedly, PMV depletion leads to parasite death immediately after invasion of RBCs, distinct from other disruptions of the export pathway. This suggests that PMV inhibitors could lead to relatively rapid parasite death, and that PMV has additional unexplored role(s) during RBC infection.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ze-Xian Liu ◽  
Panqin Wang ◽  
Qingfeng Zhang ◽  
Shihua Li ◽  
Yuxin Zhang ◽  
...  

Decreased oxygen concentrations (hypoxia) outside of the physiological range may severely subvert cell, tissue, and organism survival. Mammals have evolved mechanisms to sense hypoxia and induce a series of hypoxic responses. In recent years, high-throughput techniques have greatly promoted global perturbation studies of protein expression during hypoxia, and these studies have contributed to the understanding of the complex regulatory networks of hypoxia. In this study, we developed an integrated resource for the expression dynamics of proteins in response to hypoxia (iHypoxia), which contains 1,629 expression events of 1,215 proteins identified by low-throughput experiments (LTEs) and 154,953 quantitative expression events of 36,194 proteins identified by high-throughput experiments (HTEs) from five mammals that exhibit a response to hypoxia. Various experimental details such as the hypoxic experimental conditions, expression patterns, and samples were carefully collected and integrated. In addition, we conducted an orthologous search and identified 581,763 proteins that may respond to hypoxia among 50 animals. An enrichment analysis of human proteins identified from LTEs showed that these proteins were enriched in certain drug targets and cancer genes. The annotation of known posttranslational modification (PTM) sites to proteins identified by LTEs revealed that these proteins underwent extensive PTMs, particularly phosphorylation, ubiquitination and acetylation. Based on the results, iHypoxia provides a convenient and user-friendly method for users to obtain hypoxia-related information of interest. We anticipate that iHypoxia, which is freely accessible at http://ihypoxia.omicsbio.info, will advance the understanding of hypoxia and serve as a valuable data resource.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Hicham Houhou ◽  
Oliver Puckelwaldt ◽  
Christina Strube ◽  
Simone Haeberlein

Abstract The liver fluke Fasciola hepatica causes fasciolosis, a foodborne zoonosis affecting humans and livestock worldwide. A reliable quantification of gene expression in all parasite life stages relevant for targeting by anthelmintics in the mammalian host is fundamental. The aim of this study was to define a set of stably expressed reference genes for qRT-PCR in Fasciola studies. We determined the expression stabilities of eight candidate reference genes by the algorithms NormFinder, geNorm, BestKeeper, and comparative ΔCT method. The most stably expressed reference genes for the comparison of intra-mammalian life stages were glutamyl-prolyl-tRNA synthetase (Fheprs) and tubulin-specific chaperone D (Fhtbcd). The two best reference genes for analysis of in vitro-cultured juveniles were Fhtbcd and proteasome subunit beta type-7 (Fhpsmb7). These genes should replace the housekeeping gene gapdh which is used in most Fasciola studies to date, but in fact was differentially expressed in our analysis. Based on the new reference genes, we quantified expression of five kinases (Abl1, Abl2, PKC, Akt1, Plk1) discussed as targets in other parasitic flatworms. Distinct expression patterns throughout development were revealed and point to interesting biological functions. We like to motivate using this set of validated reference genes for future F. hepatica research, such as studies on drug targets or parasite development.


Science ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 369 (6511) ◽  
pp. 1649-1653
Author(s):  
Jipeng Wang ◽  
Carlos Paz ◽  
Gilda Padalino ◽  
Avril Coghlan ◽  
Zhigang Lu ◽  
...  

Schistosome parasites kill 250,000 people every year. Treatment of schistosomiasis relies on the drug praziquantel. Unfortunately, a scarcity of molecular tools has hindered the discovery of new drug targets. Here, we describe a large-scale RNA interference (RNAi) screen in adult Schistosoma mansoni that examined the function of 2216 genes. We identified 261 genes with phenotypes affecting neuromuscular function, tissue integrity, stem cell maintenance, and parasite survival. Leveraging these data, we prioritized compounds with activity against the parasites and uncovered a pair of protein kinases (TAO and STK25) that cooperate to maintain muscle-specific messenger RNA transcription. Loss of either of these kinases results in paralysis and worm death in a mammalian host. These studies may help expedite therapeutic development and invigorate studies of these neglected parasites.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie A. Terry ◽  
John A. Basarab ◽  
Le Luo Guan ◽  
Tim A. McAllister

Globally, there are approximately one billion beef cattle, and compared with poultry and swine, beef cattle have the poorest conversion efficiency of feed to meat. However, these metrics fail to consider that beef cattle produce high-quality protein from feeds that are unsuitable for other livestock species. Strategies to improve the efficiency of beef cattle are focusing on operational and breeding management, host genetics, functional efficiency of rumen and respiratory microbiomes, and the structure and composition of feed. These strategies must also consider the health and immunity of the herd as well as the need for beef cattle to thrive in a changing environment. Genotyping can identify hybrid vigor with positive consequences for animal health, productivity, and environmental adaptability. The role of microbiome–host interactions is key in efficient nutrient digestion and host health. Microbial markers and gene expression patterns within the rumen microbiome are being used to identify hosts that are efficient at fibre digestion. Plant breeding and processing are optimizing the feed value of both forages and concentrates. Strategies to improve the efficiency of cattle production are a prerequisite for the sustainable intensification needed to satisfy the future demand for beef.


Microbiology ◽  
2005 ◽  
Vol 151 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qian Gao ◽  
Katharine E. Kripke ◽  
Alok J. Saldanha ◽  
Weihong Yan ◽  
Susan Holmes ◽  
...  

Intraspecies genetic diversity has been demonstrated to be important in the pathogenesis and epidemiology of several pathogens, such as HIV, influenza, Helicobacter and Salmonella. It is also important to consider strain-to-strain variation when identifying drug targets and vaccine antigens and developing tools for molecular diagnostics. Here, the authors present a description of the variability in gene expression patterns among ten clinical isolates of Mycobacterium tuberculosis, plus the laboratory strains H37Rv and H37Ra, growing in liquid culture. They identified 527 genes (15 % of those tested) that are variably expressed among the isolates studied. The remaining genes were divided into three categories based on their expression levels: unexpressed (38 %), low to undetectable expression (31 %) and consistently expressed (16 %). The expression categories were compared with functional categories and three biologically interesting gene lists: genes that are deleted among clinical isolates, T-cell antigens and essential genes. There were significant associations between expression variability and the classification of genes as T-cell antigens, involved in lipid metabolism, PE/PPE, insertion sequences and phages, and deleted among clinical isolates. This survey of mRNA expression among clinical isolates of M. tuberculosis demonstrates that genes with important functions can vary in their expression levels between strains grown under identical conditions.


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