Structure classification of the proteins from Salmonella enterica pangenome revealed novel potential pathogenicity islands
Salmonella enterica is a pathogenic bacterium known for causing severe typhoid fever in humans, making it important to study due to its potential health risks and significant impact on public health. This study provides evolutionary classification of proteins from Salmonella enterica pangenome. We c...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2024-05, Vol.14 (1), p.12260-12260, Article 12260 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Salmonella enterica
is a pathogenic bacterium known for causing severe typhoid fever in humans, making it important to study due to its potential health risks and significant impact on public health. This study provides evolutionary classification of proteins from
Salmonella enterica
pangenome. We classified 17,238 domains from 13,147 proteins from 79,758
Salmonella enterica
strains and studied in detail domains of 272 proteins from 14 characterized
Salmonella
pathogenicity islands (SPIs). Among SPIs-related proteins, 90 proteins function in the secretion machinery. 41% domains of SPI proteins have no previous sequence annotation. By comparing clinical and environmental isolates, we identified 3682 proteins that are overrepresented in clinical group that we consider as potentially pathogenic. Among domains of potentially pathogenic proteins only 50% domains were annotated by sequence methods previously. Moreover, 36% (1330 out of 3682) of potentially pathogenic proteins cannot be classified into Evolutionary Classification of Protein Domains database (ECOD). Among classified domains of potentially pathogenic proteins the most populated homology groups include helix-turn-helix (HTH), Immunoglobulin-related, and P-loop domains-related. Functional analysis revealed overrepresentation of these protein in biological processes related to viral entry into host cell, antibiotic biosynthesis, DNA metabolism and conformation change, and underrepresentation in translational processes. Analysis of the potentially pathogenic proteins indicates that they form 119 clusters or novel potential pathogenicity islands (NPPIs) within the
Salmonella
genome, suggesting their potential contribution to the bacterium’s virulence. One of the NPPIs revealed significant overrepresentation of potentially pathogenic proteins. Overall, our analysis revealed that identified potentially pathogenic proteins are poorly studied. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41598-024-60991-x |