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Transcriptomic profiling of gene expression and RNA processing duringLeishmania majordifferentiation
Author(s) -
Laura A. L. Dillon,
Kwame Okrah,
V. Keith Hughitt,
Rahul Suresh,
Yuan Li,
Maria Cecília Fernandes,
Ashton T. Belew,
Héctor Corrada Bravo,
David M. Mosser,
Najib M. El-Sayed
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
nucleic acids research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 9.008
H-Index - 537
eISSN - 1362-4954
pISSN - 0305-1048
DOI - 10.1093/nar/gkv656
Subject(s) - biology , transcriptome , polyadenylation , gene expression , gene , rna splicing , rna seq , gene expression profiling , genetics , computational biology , leishmania , rna , alternative splicing , messenger rna , parasite hosting , world wide web , computer science
Protozoan parasites of the genus Leishmania are the etiological agents of leishmaniasis, a group of diseases with a worldwide incidence of 0.9-1.6 million cases per year. We used RNA-seq to conduct a high-resolution transcriptomic analysis of the global changes in gene expression and RNA processing events that occur as L. major transforms from non-infective procyclic promastigotes to infective metacyclic promastigotes. Careful statistical analysis across multiple biological replicates and the removal of batch effects provided a high quality framework for comprehensively analyzing differential gene expression and transcriptome remodeling in this pathogen as it acquires its infectivity. We also identified precise 5' and 3' UTR boundaries for a majority of Leishmania genes and detected widespread alternative trans-splicing and polyadenylation. An investigation of possible correlations between stage-specific preferential trans-splicing or polyadenylation sites and differentially expressed genes revealed a lack of systematic association, establishing that differences in expression levels cannot be attributed to stage-regulated alternative RNA processing. Our findings build on and improve existing expression datasets and provide a substantially more detailed view of L. major biology that will inform the field and potentially provide a stronger basis for drug discovery and vaccine development efforts.

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