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Four layer multi-omics reveals molecular responses to aneuploidy in Leishmania

Authors :
Cuypers, Bart
Meysman, Pieter
Erb, Ionas
Bittremieux, Wout
VALKENBORG, Dirk
Baggerman, Geert
Mertens, Inge
Sundar, Shyam
Khanal, Basudha
Notredame, Cedric
Dujardin, Jean-Claude
Domagalska, Malgorzata A.
Laukens, Kris
Engwerda, Christian R.
Meysman, Pieter/0000-0001-5903-633X
Cuypers, Bart/0000-0002-7198-1470
Cuypers, Bart
Meysman, Pieter
Erb, Ionas
Bittremieux, Wout
VALKENBORG, Dirk
Baggerman, Geert
Mertens, Inge
Sundar, Shyam
Khanal, Basudha
Notredame, Cedric
Dujardin, Jean-Claude
Domagalska, Malgorzata A.
Laukens, Kris
Engwerda, Christian R.
Source :
PLoS pathogens
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2022.

Abstract

Aneuploidy causes system-wide disruptions in the stochiometric balances of transcripts, proteins, and metabolites, often resulting in detrimental effects for the organism. The protozoan parasite Leishmania has an unusually high tolerance for aneuploidy, but the molecular and functional consequences for the pathogen remain poorly understood. Here, we addressed this question in vitro and present the first integrated analysis of the genome, transcriptome, proteome, and metabolome of highly aneuploid Leishmania donovani strains. Our analyses unambiguously establish that aneuploidy in Leishmania proportionally impacts the average transcript- and protein abundance levels of affected chromosomes, ultimately correlating with the degree of metabolic differences between closely related aneuploid strains. This proportionality was present in both proliferative and non-proliferative in vitro promastigotes. However, as in other Eukaryotes, we observed attenuation of dosage effects for protein complex subunits and in addition, non-cytoplasmic proteins. Differentially expressed transcripts and proteins between aneuploid Leishmania strains also originated from non-aneuploid chromosomes. At protein level, these were enriched for proteins involved in protein metabolism, such as chaperones and chaperonins, peptidases, and heat-shock proteins. In conclusion, our results further support the view that aneuploidy in Leishmania can be adaptive. Additionally, we believe that the high karyotype diversity in vitro and absence of classical transcriptional regulation make Leishmania an attractive model to study processes of protein homeostasis in the context of aneuploidy and beyond. We thank the Center of Medical Genetics at the University of Antwerp for hosting the NGS facility on which our RNA-Seq experiments were performed. The computational resources used for this work were provided by the VSC (Flemish Supercomputer Center) at the University of Antwerp.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15537366
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS pathogens
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d02634397e3c84a1fc810da3a504a4b5