4.7 Article

Marine gregarine genomes reveal the breadth of apicomplexan diversity with a partially conserved glideosome machinery

期刊

BMC GENOMICS
卷 23, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12864-022-08700-8

关键词

Apicomplexa; Marine gregarine; Genome assembly; Comparative genomics; Gliding; Phylogeny

资金

  1. French Agence Nationale de la Recherche [LabEx ANR-10-LABX-0003-BCDiv]
  2. CNRS (Julie Boisard's PhD fellowship)
  3. EMBRC-France [ANR-10-INSB-02]
  4. Agence Nationale de la Recherche
  5. Investissements d'avenir [ANR-11-IDEX-0004-02]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Our current understanding of the evolutionary history, coding, and adaptive capacities of Apicomplexa is biased towards species infecting humans, and limited information is available for early diverging apicomplexan lineages infecting invertebrates. In this study, the genome of Porospora gigantea, a marine eugregarine parasite of lobsters, was characterized. The genome analysis revealed high divergence from other known apicomplexan species and provided insights into the molecular basis of key functions such as gliding. These findings highlight the importance of studying gregarines to broaden our knowledge of apicomplexan species diversity and their molecular mechanisms.
Our current view of the evolutionary history, coding and adaptive capacities of Apicomplexa, protozoan parasites of a wide range of metazoan, is currently strongly biased toward species infecting humans, as data on early diverging apicomplexan lineages infecting invertebrates is extremely limited. Here, we characterized the genome of the marine eugregarine Porospora gigantea, intestinal parasite of Lobsters, remarkable for the macroscopic size of its vegetative feeding forms (trophozoites) and its gliding speed, the fastest so far recorded for Apicomplexa. Two highly syntenic genomes named A and B were assembled. Similar in size (similar to 9 Mb) and coding capacity (similar to 5300 genes), A and B genomes are 10.8% divergent at the nucleotide level, corresponding to 16-38 My in divergent time. Orthogroup analysis across 25 (proto)Apicomplexa species, including Gregarina niphandrodes, showed that A and B are highly divergent from all other known apicomplexan species, revealing an unexpected breadth of diversity. Phylogenetically these two species branch sisters to Cephaloidophoroidea, and thus expand the known crustacean gregarine superfamily. The genomes were mined for genes encoding proteins necessary for gliding, a key feature of apicomplexans parasites, currently studied through the molecular model called glideosome. Sequence analysis shows that actin-related proteins and regulatory factors are strongly conserved within apicomplexans. In contrast, the predicted protein sequences of core glideosome proteins and adhesion proteins are highly variable among apicomplexan lineages, especially in gregarines. These results confirm the importance of studying gregarines to widen our biological and evolutionary view of apicomplexan species diversity, and to deepen our understanding of the molecular bases of key functions such as gliding, well known to allow access to the intracellular parasitic lifestyle in Apicomplexa.

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