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Título : Genome update of the dimorphic human pathogenic fungi causing paracoccidioidomycosis
Autor : McEwen Ochoa, Juan Guillermo
Muñoz Gómez, José Fernando
Gallo Bonilla, Juan Esteban
Misas Rivas, Elizabeth
Priest, Margaret
Imamovic, Alma
Young, Sarah
Zeng, Qiandong
Clay, Oliver K.
Cuomo, Christina A.
metadata.dc.subject.*: Genoma Fúngico
Genome, Fungal
Secuenciación de Nucleótidos de Alto Rendimiento
High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing
Paracoccidioides
Paracoccidioidomycosis
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D010229
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D016681
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D059014
https://id.nlm.nih.gov/mesh/D010228
Fecha de publicación : 2014
Editorial : Public Library of Science
Citación : Muñoz JF, Gallo JE, Misas E, Priest M, Imamovic A, Young S, Zeng Q, Clay OK, McEwen JG, Cuomo CA. Genome update of the dimorphic human pathogenic fungi causing paracoccidioidomycosis. PLoS Negl Trop Dis. 2014 Dec 4;8(12):e3348. doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003348.
Resumen : ABSTRACT: Paracoccidiodomycosis (PCM) is a clinically important fungal disease that can acquire serious systemic forms and is caused by the thermodimorphic fungal Paracoccidioides spp. PCM is a tropical disease that is endemic in Latin America, where up to ten million people are infected; 80% of reported cases occur in Brazil, followed by Colombia and Venezuela. To enable genomic studies and to better characterize the pathogenesis of this dimorphic fungus, two reference strains of P. brasiliensis (Pb03, Pb18) and one strain of P. lutzii (Pb01) were sequenced [1]. While the initial draft assemblies were accurate in large scale structure and had high overall base quality, the sequences had frequent small scale defects such as poor quality stretches, unknown bases (N's), and artifactual deletions or nucleotide duplications, all of which caused larger scale errors in predicted gene structures. Since assembly consensus errors can now be addressed using next generation sequencing (NGS) in combination with recent methods allowing systematic assembly improvement, we re-sequenced the three reference strains of Paracoccidioides spp. using Illumina technology. We utilized the high sequencing depth to re-evaluate and improve the original assemblies generated from Sanger sequence reads, and obtained more complete and accurate reference assemblies. The new assemblies led to improved transcript predictions for the vast majority of genes of these reference strains, and often substantially corrected gene structures. These include several genes that are central to virulence or expressed during the pathogenic yeast stage in Paracoccidioides and other fungi, such as HSP90, RYP1-3, BAD1, catalase B, alpha-1,3-glucan synthase and the beta glucan synthase target gene FKS1. The improvement and validation of these reference sequences will now allow more accurate genome-based analyses. To our knowledge, this is one of the first reports of a fully automated and quality-assessed upgrade of a genome assembly and annotation for a non-model fungus. Author Summary: The fungal genus Paracoccidioides is the causal agent of paracoccidioidomycosis (PCM), a neglected tropical disease that is endemic in several countries of South America. Paracoccidioides is a pathogenic dimorphic fungus that is capable of converting to a virulent yeast form after inhalation by the host. Therefore the molecular biology of the switch to the yeast phase is of particular interest for understanding the virulence of this and other human pathogenic fungi, and ultimately for reducing the morbidity and mortality caused by such fungal infections. We here present the strategy and methods we used to update and improve accuracy of three reference genome sequences of Paracoccidioides spp. utilizing state-of-the-art Illumina re-sequencing, assembly improvement, re-annotation, and quality assessment. The resulting improved genome resource should be of wide use not solely for advancing research on the genetics and molecular biology of Paracoccidioides and the closely related pathogenic species Histoplasma and Blastomyces, but also for fungal diagnostics based on sequencing or molecular assays, characterizing rapidly changing proteins that may be involved in virulence, SNP-based population analyses and other tasks that require high sequence accuracy. The genome update and underlying strategy and methods also serve as a proof of principle that could encourage similar improvements of other draft genomes.
metadata.dc.identifier.eissn: 1935-2735
ISSN : 1935-2727
metadata.dc.identifier.doi: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0003348
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos de Revista en Ciencias Médicas

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