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Series GSE48475 Query DataSets for GSE48475
Status Public on Dec 31, 2013
Title Examining the genetic basis for visceral leishmaniasis disease: Comparison of distinct Leishmania donovani isolates that cause cutaneous and visceral leishmaniasis in Sri Lanka
Organism Leishmania donovani
Experiment type Expression profiling by high throughput sequencing
Other
Summary Among the most central questions in Leishmania research is why some species remain in the skin dermis at the site of infection by the sand fly vector whereas other species migrate to visceral organs where they cause fatal visceral leishmaniasis. Although L. donovani is the species typically responsible for visceral leishmaniasis, an atypical L. donovani strain is the etiologic agent for cutaneous leishmaniasis in Sri Lanka. To identify molecular determinants for visceral disease, we have analysed the phenotype and genotype of two L. donovani clinical isolates from Sri Lanka where one isolate was derived from a cutaneous leishmaniasis patient (CL) and the other from a visceral leishmaniasis patient (VL). These isolates cause dramatically different pathology when introduced into mice; notably the CL isolate has lost the ability to survive in visceral organs while the VL isolate was highly virulent in visceral organs of BALB/c mice. Whole genome sequencing of the CL and VL isolates revealed that these genomes were very similar as there were no gene deletions and few individual gene amplifications. Indels resulting in frame shifts and loss/gain of stop codons resulted in 13 distinct pseudogenes present in each of the CL and VL isolates. There were 154 non-synonymous SNPs specific to the CL isolate and 193 non-synonymous SNPs specific to the VL isolate. Genome wide gene expression analysis revealed several transcript level differences, including the A2 virulence gene resulting in higher expression of A2 proteins in the VL isolate than in the CL isolate. Genotypic variations relevant to pathology and tropism in Leishmania can be interrogated by reverse genetics. Experimentally increasing A2 expression in the CL isolate through gene transfer significantly increased it’s ability to survive in the spleen of BALB/c mice and conversely, down-regulating A2 expression in the VL isolate abrogated attenuated its survival in BALB/c mice. These observations reveal that there are relatively few genetic differences between the CL and VL isolates apart from the A2 genes, but collectively these have profound effects on human disease and experimentally infected mice.
 
Overall design 6 Samples in total, 3 each from VL and CL causing isolates were analyzed by Splice Leader RNASeq. These three samples from each of the isolates were grown to form one of the following three lifestages, Promastigotes, Macrophage derived Amastigotes, Axenic Amastigotes.
 
Contributor(s) Zhang W, Ramasamy G, McCall L, Haydock A, Ranasinghe S, Wickremasinghe R, Myler P, Matlashewski G
Citation(s) 24992200
Submission date Jul 02, 2013
Last update date May 15, 2019
Contact name Gowthaman Ramasamy
E-mail(s) Gowthaman.Ramasamy@seattlebiomed.org
Phone 206-256-7188
Organization name SEATTLE BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE
Department GHBC
Lab Bioinformatics Core & Myler Lab
Street address 307 WESTLAKE AVE N
City SEATTLE
State/province WASHINGTON
ZIP/Postal code 98109
Country USA
 
Platforms (1)
GPL17379 Illumina Genome Analyzer IIx (Leishmania donovani)
Samples (6)
GSM1179578 Macrophage derived Amastigotes from VL causing Ldo isolate
GSM1179579 Macrophage derived Amastigotes from CL causing Ldo isolate
GSM1179580 Cutured promastigotes from VL causing Ldo isolate
Relations
BioProject PRJNA210295
SRA SRP026479

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Supplementary file Size Download File type/resource
GSE48475_RAW.tar 590.0 Kb (http)(custom) TAR (of TXT)
SRA Run SelectorHelp
Raw data are available in SRA
Processed data provided as supplementary file

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