4.6 Article

Secretome Profiling by Proteogenomic Analysis Shows Species-Specific, Temperature-Dependent, and Putative Virulence Proteins of Pythium insidiosum

期刊

JOURNAL OF FUNGI
卷 8, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jof8050527

关键词

Pythium insidiosum; pythiosis; proteome; genome; secretome; pathogenicity

资金

  1. National Research Council of Thailand, Thailand [N42A650339]
  2. Thailand Research Fund [RSA6280092]
  3. Faculty of Medicine, Ramathibodi Hospital, Mahidol University, Thailand [CF_65003]

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This study analyzed the secretome of Pythium insidiosum using proteogenomic analysis and validated its expression in vivo. P. insidiosum may employ an alternative secretory pathway, and its specific secreted/extracellular proteins may be responsible for host-specific infection. Additionally, some proteins that were significantly upregulated at body temperature may contribute to the pathogen's fitness and thermotolerance. Secreted/extracellular proteins, such as urease and chaperones, identified through a microbial virulence database, may play roles in P. insidiosum virulence.
In contrast to most pathogenic oomycetes, which infect plants, Pythium insidiosum infects both humans and animals, causing a difficult-to-treat condition called pythiosis. Most patients undergo surgical removal of an affected organ, and advanced cases could be fetal. As a successful human/animal pathogen, P. insidiosum must tolerate body temperature and develop some strategies to survive and cause pathology within hosts. One of the general pathogen strategies is virulence factor secretion. Here, we used proteogenomic analysis to profile and validate the secretome of P. insidiosum, in which its genome contains 14,962 predicted proteins. Shotgun LC-MS/MS analysis of P. insidiosum proteins prepared from liquid cultures incubated at 25 and 37 degrees C mapped 2980 genome-predicted proteins, 9.4% of which had a predicted signal peptide. P. insidiosum might employ an alternative secretory pathway, as 90.6% of the validated secretory/extracellular proteins lacked the signal peptide. A comparison of 20 oomycete genomes showed 69 P. insidiosum-specific secretory/extracellular proteins, and these may be responsible for the host-specific infection. The differential expression analysis revealed 14 markedly upregulated proteins (particularly cyclophilin and elicitin) at body temperature which could contribute to pathogen fitness and thermotolerance. Our search through a microbial virulence database matched 518 secretory/extracellular proteins, such as urease and chaperones (including heat shock proteins), that might play roles in P. insidiosum virulence. In conclusion, the identification of the secretome promoted a better understanding of P. insidiosum biology and pathogenesis. Cyclophilin, elicitin, chaperone, and urease are top-listed secreted/extracellular proteins with putative pathogenicity properties. Such advances could lead to developing measures for the efficient detection and treatment of pythiosis.

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