The genome of the kinetoplastid parasite, Leishmania major

Academic Article

Abstract

  • Leishmania species cause a spectrum of human diseases in tropical and subtropical regions of the world. We have sequenced the 36 chromosomes of the 32.8-megabase haploid genome of Leishmania major (Friedlin strain) and predict 911 RNA genes, 39 pseudogenes, and 8272 protein-coding genes, of which 36% can be ascribed a putative function. These include genes involved in host-pathogen interactions, such as proteolytic enzymes, and extensive machinery for synthesis of complex surface glycoconjugates. The organization of protein-coding genes into long, strand-specific, polycistronic clusters and lack of general transcription factors in the L. major, Trypanosoma brucei, and Trypanosoma cruzi (Tritryp) genomes suggest that the mechanisms regulating RNA polymerase II-directed transcription are distinct from those operating in other eukaryotes, although the trypanosomatids appear capable of chromatin remodeling. Abundant RNA-binding proteins are encoded in the Tritryp genomes, consistent with active posttranscriptional regulation of gene expression.
  • Published In

  • Science  Journal
  • Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Author List

  • Ivens AC; Peacock CS; Worthey EA; Murphy L; Aggarwal G; Berriman M; Sisk E; Rajandream MA; Adlem E; Aert R
  • Start Page

  • 436
  • End Page

  • 442
  • Volume

  • 309
  • Issue

  • 5733