1 / 11

Tryptophan Synthase in Chlamydia

Tryptophan Synthase in Chlamydia. Angela Ghrist Lori Scott. Background. Intracellular parasites: viruses, bacteria ( Chlamydias , Rickettsias ), and protozoa (plasmodia) (CDC website)

moirae
Télécharger la présentation

Tryptophan Synthase in Chlamydia

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Tryptophan Synthase in Chlamydia Angela Ghrist Lori Scott

  2. Background Intracellular parasites: viruses, bacteria (Chlamydias, Rickettsias), and protozoa (plasmodia) (CDC website) Tryptophan biosynthesis genes are found to varying degrees within the Chlamydiaceae family (“Kegg pathway” program) Immune response of humans to Chlamydia infection involves the release of interferon. This activates an enzyme that degrades tryptophan, thereby reducing Chlamydia reproduction inside the host cell (PubMed) Tryptophan is an essential amino acid in humans

  3. Taxonomy Lineage (full): root; cellular organisms; Bacteria; Chlamydiae/Verrucomicrobia group; Chlamydiae; Chlamydiae (class); Chlamydiales Chlamydiaceae • CandidatusClavochlamydia • CandidatusClavochlamydiasalmonicola • Chlamydia • Chlamydia muridarum • Chlamydia suis • Chlamydia trachomatis • Chlamydophila • Chlamydophilaabortus • Chlamydophilacaviae • Chlamydophilafelis • Chlamydophilapecorum • Chlamydophilapneumoniae • Chlamydophilapsittaci TaxBrowser in NCBI

  4. Available Genomes • Completed Candidatus Protochlamydia amoebophila UWE25 proteins; • Completed Chlamydia muridarum Nigg proteins; • Completed Chlamydia trachomatis A/HAR-13 proteins; • Completed Chlamydia trachomatis D/UW-3/CX proteins; • Completed Chlamydophila abortus S26/3 proteins; • Completed Chlamydophila caviae GPIC proteins; • Completed Chlamydophila felis Fe/C-56 proteins; • Completed Chlamydophila pneumoniae AR39 proteins; • Completed Chlamydophila pneumoniae CWL029 proteins; • Completed Chlamydophila pneumoniae J138 proteins; • Completed Chlamydophila pneumoniae TW-183 proteins NCBI – Genomic Biology

  5. Enolase NCBI - Genome Blast Search and Tree Building

  6. Unrooted tree (generated by Phylip's Drawtree) DendrogramEnolase Workbench, ClustalW

  7. Observation There are multiple serovars of Chlamydia tachomatis, distinguished by route of infection. Question Are there differences in their trp genes?

  8. Comparison of Ocular (A) and Genital (D) TrpA Genes trpA_D CTTCTACAAAGGGACTTAGATTATCTACGCAGACTAAAAGACGCGGGAATAAATGGTGTG trpA_A CTTCTACAAAGGGACTTAGATTATCTACGCAGACTAAAAGACGCGGGAATAAATGGTGTG trpA_D TGCGTTATAGATCTTCCAGCACCTTTATCACACGGAGAAAAATCTCCATTTTTTGAAGAT trpA_A TGCGTTATAGATCTTCCAGCACCTTTATCACACGGAGAAAAATCTCC---TTTTGAAGAT trpA_D CTTTTAGCTGTAGGATTGGATCCTATTTTGCTTATTTCTGCAGGGACAACGCCGGAGCGG trpA_A CTTTTAGCTGTAGGATTGGATCCTATTTTGCTTATTTCTGCAGGGACAACGCCGGAGCGG trpA_D ATGTCTTTAATACAAGAATACGCAAGAGGCTTTCTGTATTATATCCCATGTCAAGCTACG trpA_A ATGTCTTTAATACAAGAACACGCAAGAGGCCTTCTGTATTATATCCCATA-CAAGCTACG

  9. Ocular vs. Genital Tryptophan Synthase Polymorphisms in Chlamydia trachomatis tryptophan synthase genes differentiate between genital and ocular isolatesJ. Clin. Invest. Harlan D. Caldwell, et al. 111:1757 doi:10.1172/JCI17993

  10. Question Has the Chlamydia L serovar that causes a systemic lymph node infection retained the tryptophan synthase (trpA) gene like the genital serovars, as opposed to acquiring nonsense mutations like the ocular serovars?

More Related