Annotation of microsporidian genomes using transcriptional signals

High-quality annotation of microsporidian genomes is essential for understanding the biological processes that govern the development of these parasites. Here we present an improved structural annotation method using transcriptional DNA signals. We apply this method to re-annotate four previously an...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2012, Vol.3 (1), p.1137-1137, Article 1137
Hauptverfasser: Peyretaillade, Eric, Parisot, Nicolas, Polonais, Valérie, Terrat, Sébastien, Denonfoux, Jérémie, Dugat-Bony, Eric, Wawrzyniak, Ivan, Biderre-Petit, Corinne, Mahul, Antoine, Rimour, Sébastien, Gonçalves, Olivier, Bornes, Stéphanie, Delbac, Frédéric, Chebance, Brigitte, Duprat, Simone, Samson, Gaëlle, Katinka, Michael, Weissenbach, Jean, Wincker, Patrick, Peyret, Pierre
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:High-quality annotation of microsporidian genomes is essential for understanding the biological processes that govern the development of these parasites. Here we present an improved structural annotation method using transcriptional DNA signals. We apply this method to re-annotate four previously annotated genomes, which allow us to detect annotation errors and identify a significant number of unpredicted genes. We then annotate the newly sequenced genome of Anncaliia algerae . A comparative genomic analysis of A. algerae permits the identification of not only microsporidian core genes, but also potentially highly expressed genes encoding membrane-associated proteins, which represent good candidates involved in the spore architecture, the invasion process and the microsporidian–host relationships. Furthermore, we find that the ten-fold variation in microsporidian genome sizes is not due to gene number, size or complexity, but instead stems from the presence of transposable elements. Such elements, along with kinase regulatory pathways and specific transporters, appear to be key factors in microsporidian adaptive processes. Microsporidia are widespread human parasites, but limited genome annotation has hampered efforts to understand their biology. Peyretaillade et al . use sequence motifs upstream of start codons to annotate or re-annotate microsporidian genomes and find new genes potentially involved in interactions with the host.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms2156