60 research outputs found

    Making the most of its short reads: a bioinformatics workflow for analysing the short-read-only data of Leishmania orientalis (formerly named Leishmania siamensis) isolate PCM2 in Thailand

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    Background: Leishmania orientalis (formerly named Leishmania siamensis) has been neglected for years in Thailand. The genomic study of L. orientalis has gained much attention recently after the release of the first high-quality reference genome of the isolate LSCM4. The integrative approach of multiple sequencing platforms for whole-genome sequencing has proven effective at the expense of considerably expensive costs. This study presents a preliminary bioinformatic workflow including the use of multi-step de novo assembly coupled with the reference-based assembly method to produce high-quality genomic drafts from the short-read Illumina sequence data of L. orientalis isolate PCM2. Results: The integrating multi-step de novo assembly by MEGAHIT and SPAdes with the reference-based method using the L. enriettii genome and salvaging the unmapped reads resulted in the 30.27 Mb genomic draft of L. orientalis isolate PCM2 with 3367 contigs and 8887 predicted genes. The results from the integrated approach showed the best integrity, coverage, and contig alignment when compared to the genome of L. orientalis isolate LSCM4 collected from the northern province of Thailand. Similar patterns of gene ratios and frequency were observed from the GO biological process annotation. Fifty GO terms were assigned to the assembled genomes, and 23 of these (accounting for 61.6% of the annotated genes) showed higher gene counts and ratios when results from our workflow were compared to those of the LSCM4 isolate. Conclusions: These results indicated that our proposed bioinformatic workflow produced an acceptable-quality genome of L. orientalis strain PCM2 for functional genomic analysis, maximising the usage of the short-read data. This workflow would give extensive information required for identifying strain-specific markers and virulence-associated genes useful for drug and vaccine development before a more exhaustive and expensive investigation

    Identification of a conserved maxicircle and unique minicircles as part of the mitochondrial genome of Leishmania martiniquensis strain PCM3 in Thailand

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    Background: The mitochondrial DNA of trypanosomatids, including Leishmania, is known as kinetoplast DNAs (kDNAs). The kDNAs form networks of hundreds of DNA circles that are evidently interlocked and require complex RNA editing. Previous studies showed that kDNA played a role in drug resistance, adaptation, and survival of Leishmania. Leishmania martiniquensis is one of the most frequently observed species in Thailand, and its kDNAs have not been illustrated. Methods: This study aimed to extract the kDNA sequences from Illumina short-read and PacBio long-read whole-genome sequence data of L. martiniquensis strain PCM3 priorly isolated from the southern province of Thailand. A circular maxicircle DNA was reconstructed by de novo assembly using the SPAdes program, while the minicircle sequences were retrieved and assembled by the rKOMIC tool. The kDNA contigs were confirmed by blasting to the NCBI database, followed by comparative genomic and phylogenetic analysis. Results: We successfully constructed the complete circular sequence of the maxicircle (19,008 bp) and 214 classes of the minicircles from L. martiniquensis strain PCM3. The genome comparison and annotation showed that the maxicircle structure of L. martiniquensis strain PCM3 was similar to those of L. enriettii strain LEM3045 (84.29%), L. arabica strain LEM1108 (82.79%), and L. tarentolae (79.2%). Phylogenetic analysis also showed unique evolution of the minicircles of L. martiniquensis strain PCM3 from other examined Leishmania species. Conclusions: This was the first report of the complete maxicircle and 214 minicircles of L. martiniquensis strain PCM3 using integrated whole-genome sequencing data. The information will be helpful for further improvement of diagnosis methods and monitoring genetic diversity changes of this parasite

    Oh my aching gut: irritable bowel syndrome, Blastocystis, and asymptomatic infection

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    Blastocystis is a prevalent enteric protozoan that infects a variety of vertebrates. Infection with Blastocystis in humans has been associated with abdominal pain, diarrhea, constipation, fatigue, skin rash, and other symptoms. Researchers using different methods and examining different patient groups have reported asymptomatic infection, acute symptomatic infection, and chronic symptomatic infection. The variation in accounts has lead to disagreements concerning the role of Blastocystis in human disease, and the importance of treating it. A better understanding of the number of species of Blastocystis that can infect humans, along with realization of the limitations of the existing clinical laboratory diagnostic techniques may account for much of the disagreement. The possibility that disagreement was caused by the emergence of particular pathogenic variants of Blastocystis is discussed, along with the potential role of Blastocystis infection in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Findings are discussed concerning the role of protease-activated receptor-2 in enteric disease which may account for the presence of abdominal pain and diffuse symptoms in Blastocystis infection, even in the absence of fever and endoscopic findings. The availability of better diagnostic techniques and treatments for Blastocystis infection may be of value in understanding chronic gastrointestinal illness of unknown etiology

    Development of loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) for simple detection of Leishmania infection

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    Abstract Background Leishmaniasis is a neglected tropical disease that is caused by an obligate intracellular protozoan of the genus Leishmania. Recently, an increasing number of autochthonous leishmaniasis cases caused by L. martiniquensis and the novel species L. siamensis have been described in Thailand, rendering an accurate diagnosis of this disease critical. However, only a few laboratories are capable of diagnosing leishmaniasis in Thailand. To expand leishmaniasis diagnostic capabilities, we developed a simple colorimetric loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP) technique for the direct detection of Leishmania DNA. Methods LAMP was performed for 75 min using four primers targeting the conserved region of the18S ribosomal RNA gene, and the DNA indicator used was malachite green (MG). To simulate crude samples, cultured promastigotes of L. siamensis were mixed with blood or saliva. Also, clinical samples (blood, saliva, and tissue biopsies) were obtained from patients with cutaneous leishmaniasis (CL) and visceral leishmaniasis (VL). All samples were boiled for 10 min and introduced directly into the LAMP reaction mixture without DNA purification. Results The use of MG resulted in an unambiguous differentiation of positive and negative controls. For L. siamensis, the detection limit was 103 parasites/mL or 2.5 parasites/tube. Saliva, tissue biopsies, and whole blood were indicative of active Leishmania infection, and their direct usages did not adversely affect the detection limit. In addition, this LAMP assay could detect DNA from multiple Leishmania species other than L. siamensis and L. martiniquensis, including L. aethiopica, L. braziliensis, L. donovani and L. tropica. Conclusions The simplicity and sensitivity of LAMP in detecting active Leishmania infection could enable the rapid diagnosis of leishmaniasis, thereby facilitating the survey and control of leishmaniasis in Thailand. However, our limited number of samples warranted a further validation with a larger cohort of patients before this assay could be deployed
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