19 research outputs found

    Chaperones and protein isomerases identified in pooled plasma from <i>T. b. rhodesiense</i>-infected patients with parasitologically confirmed late stage human African trypanosomiasis.

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    <p>Chaperones and protein isomerases identified in pooled plasma from <i>T. b. rhodesiense</i>-infected patients with parasitologically confirmed late stage human African trypanosomiasis.</p

    Variant Surface Glycoproteins (VSGs) discovered in pooled plasma from <i>T. b. rhodesiense</i>-infected patients confirmed to have late-stage human African trypanosomiasis.

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    <p>Variant Surface Glycoproteins (VSGs) discovered in pooled plasma from <i>T. b. rhodesiense</i>-infected patients confirmed to have late-stage human African trypanosomiasis.</p

    Proteases and ubiquitin proteins discovered in pooled plasma from <i>T. b. rhodesiense</i>-infected patients with parasitologically confirmed late stage human African trypanosomiasis.

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    <p>Proteases and ubiquitin proteins discovered in pooled plasma from <i>T. b. rhodesiense</i>-infected patients with parasitologically confirmed late stage human African trypanosomiasis.</p

    List of human plasma proteins with mass spectrometric molar intensities similar to those from the most abundant trypanosome proteins found in plasma from sleeping sickness patients.

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    *<p>Protein concentrations were retrieved from reference <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0071463#pone.0071463-Hortin1" target="_blank">[19]</a>. Human proteins reported to be depleted by the LC20 IgY14 and Supermix LC10 columns <a href="http://www.plosone.org/article/info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0071463#pone.0071463-Patel1" target="_blank">[26]</a> have been omitted from this table.</p

    Summary of patient information.

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    <p>Plasma and CSF were collected from <i>T. b. rhodesiense</i>-infected patients confirmed to have late stage human African trypanosomiasis at Lwala Hospital in central Uganda.</p

    Leaderless gene architectures bring promoters and ORFs together.

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    <p>(A) Logo plot of TSS and proximal promoter region of traditional leadered genes. A purine (A or G) is favored at the +1 nucleotide, and an AT rich -10 element appears upstream. The 5’ UTR downstream of the transcription start site shows no sequence constraints or enrichment. (B) A Logo plot of the 5’ UTR from the translation initiation codon shows a Shine-Dalgarno-like AGGAGG sequence enrichment, centered 9–10 nt upstream (positions 10–11). From the initiation codon, the coding sequence downstream shows the wobble bias of the G-C rich mycobacterial genome. (C) The proximal promoter regions of leaderless genes have a -10 sequence of similar composition and spacing to that of leadered genes (compare to 2A). The TSS is also the first nucleotide of the translation initiation codon. There is no evidence of Shine-Dalgarno sequence enrichment upstream. The ORF initiated by leaderless codons shows the same wobble bias as seen in leadered ORFs.</p

    Definition of <i>cis</i> elements that support translation initiation in mycobacteria.

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    <p>(A) Zeo-seq viability reporter libraries were generated to determine the sequence context preferences for a SD upstream of a leadered initiation codon. Randomized nucleotides were positioned upstream of a leadered initiation codon, and zeocin selection enriched for Shine-Dalgarno-like sequences, indicating that mycobacteria adhere to this canonical translation criterion. (B) Leaderless translation initiation exhibits no sequence preference in the adjacent mRNA. A block of 6 nt was randomized immediately downstream of a leaderless initiation zeocin reporter construct. Sequences in the recovered pools of zeocin-resistant <i>M</i>. <i>smegmatis</i> were not enriched in composition or motifs in this region. The absence of any detectable enrichment in the randomized region for the leaderless pool indicates that there are no nucleotide preferences for efficient leaderless initiation in mycobacteria downstream of the RTG codon.</p

    A translational reporter system identified leaderless and leadered initiation codon preferences.

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    <p>(A) Libraries of leader sequences were generated using two overlapping oligonucleotides, each with a single randomized codon positioned either at the leaderless position (+1) or the leadered position (+30), in-frame with the zeocin-resistance (<i>zeo</i><sup>r</sup>) gene. Self-primed heterodimers were inserted between the promoter and the <i>zeo</i><sup>r</sup> gene and transformed into <i>E</i>. <i>coli</i>. The library was electroporated into <i>M</i>. <i>smegmatis</i>. Hygromycin selection allowed maintenance of the complete library, while zeocin selection required translation initiation at either one of the randomized codon sites. Following selection in zeocin, plasmids were recovered and the leader regions amplified for Ion-Torrent sequencing. Deep sequencing of amplicon libraries allowed the unbiased identification and estimation of relative efficiency of initiation codons. (B) A Shine-Dalgarno site was omitted to facilitate direct comparison between leaderless and leadered architectures. Read counts were compiled for each of the 64 possible codons at the leaderless position (columns) and leadered position (rows). Heat map indicates read counts of each combinatorial leaderless/leadered codon pair, from 10<sup>0</sup> (blue) through 10<sup>4</sup> (yellow). Only ATG or GTG at the leaderless position were capable of initiating translation of <i>zeo</i><sup>r</sup>. At the leadered codon position, no enrichment indicated that translation initiation did not occur at any of the possible codons. A further reduction of the expected stop codons suggested that they prevented read through of leaderless ribosomes into the <i>zeo</i><sup><i>r</i></sup> ORF. (C) A Shine-Dalgarno sequence enables efficient use of diverse leadered initiation codons. A consensus Shine-Dalgarno (SD) element was placed upstream of the randomized leadered codon position. Zeocin-resistant pools showed a complex pattern of active translation initiation codons at both the leaderless and leadered positions. The presence of a Shine-Dalgarno supported translation initiation activity of ATG and GTG triplets in the leadered position, as well as the less common TTG and ATT triplets.</p

    Small protein ORFs are frequently coupled to the ORF downstream.

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    <p>(A) <i>M</i>. <i>tuberculosis</i> leaderless transcripts initiate unannotated small protein ORFs that terminate at the start of the annotated gene downstream more often than expected. All small protein ORF stop codons within 100 nucleotides of an annotated gene start are shown relative to that start codon (0 = coupled RTGA overlap). Three structural classes are identified: uORFs (the small ORF terminates upstream of the annotated start), coupled ORFs (linked by an RTGA tetramer), and overlapping ORFs. The y-axis shows the fraction of small ORFs that terminate a specified distance (x-axis) from the annotated start codon of the downstream gene. (B) One example of a coupled small protein in <i>M</i>. <i>tuberculosis</i> and <i>M</i>. <i>smegmatis</i>, upstream of orthologous genes. The primary sequence of the encoded small protein is not conserved, but the leaderless initiation and coupled linkage is maintained.</p
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