Surface antigens and potential virulence factors from parasites detected by comparative genomics of perfect amino acid repeats

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Many parasitic organisms, eukaryotes as well as bacteria, possess surface antigens with amino acid repeats. Making up the interface between host and pathogen such repetitive proteins may be virulence factors involved in immune evasio...

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Main Authors: Adler Joël, Nguyen-Ha Tien-Minh, Fankhauser Niklaus, Mäser Pascal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2007-12-01
Series:Proteome Science
Online Access:http://www.proteomesci.com/content/5/1/20
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spelling doaj-28d9176b692e427eb6788d66c5e0196c2020-11-24T20:48:14ZengBMCProteome Science1477-59562007-12-01512010.1186/1477-5956-5-20Surface antigens and potential virulence factors from parasites detected by comparative genomics of perfect amino acid repeatsAdler JoëlNguyen-Ha Tien-MinhFankhauser NiklausMäser Pascal<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Many parasitic organisms, eukaryotes as well as bacteria, possess surface antigens with amino acid repeats. Making up the interface between host and pathogen such repetitive proteins may be virulence factors involved in immune evasion or cytoadherence. They find immunological applications in serodiagnostics and vaccine development. Here we use proteins which contain perfect repeats as a basis for comparative genomics between parasitic and free-living organisms.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We have developed Reptile <url>http://reptile.unibe.ch</url>, a program for proteome-wide probabilistic description of perfect repeats in proteins. Parasite proteomes exhibited a large variance regarding the proportion of repeat-containing proteins. Interestingly, there was a good correlation between the percentage of highly repetitive proteins and mean protein length in parasite proteomes, but not at all in the proteomes of free-living eukaryotes. Reptile combined with programs for the prediction of transmembrane domains and GPI-anchoring resulted in an effective tool for in silico identification of potential surface antigens and virulence factors from parasites.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Systemic surveys for perfect amino acid repeats allowed basic comparisons between free-living and parasitic organisms that were directly applicable to predict proteins of serological and parasitological importance. An on-line tool is available at <url>http://genomics.unibe.ch/dora</url>.</p> http://www.proteomesci.com/content/5/1/20
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Adler Joël
Nguyen-Ha Tien-Minh
Fankhauser Niklaus
Mäser Pascal
spellingShingle Adler Joël
Nguyen-Ha Tien-Minh
Fankhauser Niklaus
Mäser Pascal
Surface antigens and potential virulence factors from parasites detected by comparative genomics of perfect amino acid repeats
Proteome Science
author_facet Adler Joël
Nguyen-Ha Tien-Minh
Fankhauser Niklaus
Mäser Pascal
author_sort Adler Joël
title Surface antigens and potential virulence factors from parasites detected by comparative genomics of perfect amino acid repeats
title_short Surface antigens and potential virulence factors from parasites detected by comparative genomics of perfect amino acid repeats
title_full Surface antigens and potential virulence factors from parasites detected by comparative genomics of perfect amino acid repeats
title_fullStr Surface antigens and potential virulence factors from parasites detected by comparative genomics of perfect amino acid repeats
title_full_unstemmed Surface antigens and potential virulence factors from parasites detected by comparative genomics of perfect amino acid repeats
title_sort surface antigens and potential virulence factors from parasites detected by comparative genomics of perfect amino acid repeats
publisher BMC
series Proteome Science
issn 1477-5956
publishDate 2007-12-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Many parasitic organisms, eukaryotes as well as bacteria, possess surface antigens with amino acid repeats. Making up the interface between host and pathogen such repetitive proteins may be virulence factors involved in immune evasion or cytoadherence. They find immunological applications in serodiagnostics and vaccine development. Here we use proteins which contain perfect repeats as a basis for comparative genomics between parasitic and free-living organisms.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We have developed Reptile <url>http://reptile.unibe.ch</url>, a program for proteome-wide probabilistic description of perfect repeats in proteins. Parasite proteomes exhibited a large variance regarding the proportion of repeat-containing proteins. Interestingly, there was a good correlation between the percentage of highly repetitive proteins and mean protein length in parasite proteomes, but not at all in the proteomes of free-living eukaryotes. Reptile combined with programs for the prediction of transmembrane domains and GPI-anchoring resulted in an effective tool for in silico identification of potential surface antigens and virulence factors from parasites.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Systemic surveys for perfect amino acid repeats allowed basic comparisons between free-living and parasitic organisms that were directly applicable to predict proteins of serological and parasitological importance. An on-line tool is available at <url>http://genomics.unibe.ch/dora</url>.</p>
url http://www.proteomesci.com/content/5/1/20
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