Understanding Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis using ‘Omics’ approaches

This paper examines how Omics approaches improve our understanding of Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis, through a global and integrative strategy to identify genes and proteins involved in biochemical pathways key for pathogen-host-vector interactions.The Anaplasmataceae family comprises obligate intrac...

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Main Authors: Ludovic ePruneau, Amal eMoumène, Damien F Meyer, Isabel eMarcelino, Thierry eLefrançois, Nathalie eVachiery
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fcimb.2014.00086/full
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spelling doaj-080d433b10684247a3472bfa593651ea2020-11-25T01:11:13ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology2235-29882014-07-01410.3389/fcimb.2014.0008688683Understanding Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis using ‘Omics’ approachesLudovic ePruneau0Ludovic ePruneau1Ludovic ePruneau2Amal eMoumène3Amal eMoumène4Amal eMoumène5Damien F Meyer6Damien F Meyer7Isabel eMarcelino8Isabel eMarcelino9Isabel eMarcelino10Isabel eMarcelino11Thierry eLefrançois12Thierry eLefrançois13Nathalie eVachiery14Nathalie eVachiery15CIRADINRAUniversité des Antilles et de la GuyaneCIRADINRAUniversité des Antilles et de la GuyaneCIRADINRACIRADINRAIBETITQB-UNLCIRADINRACIRADINRAThis paper examines how Omics approaches improve our understanding of Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis, through a global and integrative strategy to identify genes and proteins involved in biochemical pathways key for pathogen-host-vector interactions.The Anaplasmataceae family comprises obligate intracellular bacteria mainly transmitted by arthropods. These bacteria are responsible for major human and animal endemic and emerging infectious diseases with important economic and public health impacts. In order to improve disease control strategies, it is essential to better understand their pathogenesis. Our work focused on four Anaplasmataceae, which cause important animal, human and zoonotic diseases: Anaplasma marginale, A. phagocytophilum, Ehrlichia chaffeensis and E. ruminantium. Wolbachia spp. an endosymbiont of arthropods was also included in this review as a model of a non-pathogenic Anaplasmataceae.A gap analysis on Omics approaches on Anaplasmataceae was performed, which highlighted a lack of studies on the genes and proteins involved in the infection of hosts and vectors. Furthermore, most of the studies have been done on the pathogen itself, mainly on infectious free-living forms and rarely on intracellular forms. In order to perform a transcriptomic analysis of the intracellular stage of development, researchers developed methods to enrich bacterial transcripts from infected cells. These methods are described in this paper. Bacterial genes encoding outer membrane proteins, post-translational modifications, eukaryotic repeated motif proteins, proteins involved in osmotic and oxidative stress and hypothetical proteins have been identified to play a key role in Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis. Further investigations on the function of these outer membrane proteins and hypothetical proteins will be essential to confirm their role in the pathogenesis. Our work underlines the need for further studies in this domain and on host and vector responses to infectionhttp://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fcimb.2014.00086/fullAnaplasmaEhrlichiaProteomicsPathogenesisTranscriptomicsAnaplamataceae
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ludovic ePruneau
Ludovic ePruneau
Ludovic ePruneau
Amal eMoumène
Amal eMoumène
Amal eMoumène
Damien F Meyer
Damien F Meyer
Isabel eMarcelino
Isabel eMarcelino
Isabel eMarcelino
Isabel eMarcelino
Thierry eLefrançois
Thierry eLefrançois
Nathalie eVachiery
Nathalie eVachiery
spellingShingle Ludovic ePruneau
Ludovic ePruneau
Ludovic ePruneau
Amal eMoumène
Amal eMoumène
Amal eMoumène
Damien F Meyer
Damien F Meyer
Isabel eMarcelino
Isabel eMarcelino
Isabel eMarcelino
Isabel eMarcelino
Thierry eLefrançois
Thierry eLefrançois
Nathalie eVachiery
Nathalie eVachiery
Understanding Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis using ‘Omics’ approaches
Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology
Anaplasma
Ehrlichia
Proteomics
Pathogenesis
Transcriptomics
Anaplamataceae
author_facet Ludovic ePruneau
Ludovic ePruneau
Ludovic ePruneau
Amal eMoumène
Amal eMoumène
Amal eMoumène
Damien F Meyer
Damien F Meyer
Isabel eMarcelino
Isabel eMarcelino
Isabel eMarcelino
Isabel eMarcelino
Thierry eLefrançois
Thierry eLefrançois
Nathalie eVachiery
Nathalie eVachiery
author_sort Ludovic ePruneau
title Understanding Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis using ‘Omics’ approaches
title_short Understanding Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis using ‘Omics’ approaches
title_full Understanding Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis using ‘Omics’ approaches
title_fullStr Understanding Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis using ‘Omics’ approaches
title_full_unstemmed Understanding Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis using ‘Omics’ approaches
title_sort understanding anaplasmataceae pathogenesis using ‘omics’ approaches
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology
issn 2235-2988
publishDate 2014-07-01
description This paper examines how Omics approaches improve our understanding of Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis, through a global and integrative strategy to identify genes and proteins involved in biochemical pathways key for pathogen-host-vector interactions.The Anaplasmataceae family comprises obligate intracellular bacteria mainly transmitted by arthropods. These bacteria are responsible for major human and animal endemic and emerging infectious diseases with important economic and public health impacts. In order to improve disease control strategies, it is essential to better understand their pathogenesis. Our work focused on four Anaplasmataceae, which cause important animal, human and zoonotic diseases: Anaplasma marginale, A. phagocytophilum, Ehrlichia chaffeensis and E. ruminantium. Wolbachia spp. an endosymbiont of arthropods was also included in this review as a model of a non-pathogenic Anaplasmataceae.A gap analysis on Omics approaches on Anaplasmataceae was performed, which highlighted a lack of studies on the genes and proteins involved in the infection of hosts and vectors. Furthermore, most of the studies have been done on the pathogen itself, mainly on infectious free-living forms and rarely on intracellular forms. In order to perform a transcriptomic analysis of the intracellular stage of development, researchers developed methods to enrich bacterial transcripts from infected cells. These methods are described in this paper. Bacterial genes encoding outer membrane proteins, post-translational modifications, eukaryotic repeated motif proteins, proteins involved in osmotic and oxidative stress and hypothetical proteins have been identified to play a key role in Anaplasmataceae pathogenesis. Further investigations on the function of these outer membrane proteins and hypothetical proteins will be essential to confirm their role in the pathogenesis. Our work underlines the need for further studies in this domain and on host and vector responses to infection
topic Anaplasma
Ehrlichia
Proteomics
Pathogenesis
Transcriptomics
Anaplamataceae
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fcimb.2014.00086/full
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