Characterisation of mariner type transposons in the human opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus and development of tagged transposon mutagenesis tools

Aspergillus fumigatus is the foremost human pathogen of the genus Aspergillus. Current therapies are only partially effective and mortality rates still exceed 60%. All current anti› aspergillus drugs target cell wall and cell membrane components so the identification of novel drug targets may provid...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hey, Peter
Published: University of Manchester 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.686245
id ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-686245
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-6862452018-06-12T03:33:04ZCharacterisation of mariner type transposons in the human opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus and development of tagged transposon mutagenesis toolsHey, Peter2007Aspergillus fumigatus is the foremost human pathogen of the genus Aspergillus. Current therapies are only partially effective and mortality rates still exceed 60%. All current anti› aspergillus drugs target cell wall and cell membrane components so the identification of novel drug targets may provide an avenue for development of drugs directed against other fungal cell sites. In this study native and non-native mariner transposable elements were investigated with the intention of using these for random mutagenesis, which when coupled with parasexual genetics can be used to identify essential genes as potential antifungal drug targets. Current mutagenesis techniques generate genomic rearrangements complicating downstream analysis whereas transposon mutagenesis results in precise integration enabling faster identification of essential genes. Six novel mariner type transposons were identified in A. fumigatus by bioinformatic analysis. These were examined for conserved functional domains within the transposase and interstrain variation in distribution both of which suggest potential activity. An insertion of the Fotl/pogo like transposon Aft1 was found to disrupt the expression of a putative G-protein coupled receptor in strain AF293 which was expressed in other strains lacking this insertion. This transposon excised from the pAft I-zeo construct in-situ however the introduction of a selectable marker within this element prevented transposition. The Aspergillus niger transposon Anti was cloned and demonstrated activity in a phenotypic excision assay however the introduction of a selectable marker eliminated this activity. Attempts at tagging Aspergillus transposons proved unsuccessful therefore experiments were conducted using the Fusarium oxysporum transposon impala, which had been demonstrated to transpose in A. fumigatus but had proven problematic in mutagenesis screens. Variations in germination and growth conditions solved reported problems and this element was used in a random mutagenesis screen to identify several putative essential genes. Medium throughput methodologies were developed and were found to be suitable for integration with current F2G Ltd. proprietary Mycobank technology.579.5University of Manchesterhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.686245Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 579.5
spellingShingle 579.5
Hey, Peter
Characterisation of mariner type transposons in the human opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus and development of tagged transposon mutagenesis tools
description Aspergillus fumigatus is the foremost human pathogen of the genus Aspergillus. Current therapies are only partially effective and mortality rates still exceed 60%. All current anti› aspergillus drugs target cell wall and cell membrane components so the identification of novel drug targets may provide an avenue for development of drugs directed against other fungal cell sites. In this study native and non-native mariner transposable elements were investigated with the intention of using these for random mutagenesis, which when coupled with parasexual genetics can be used to identify essential genes as potential antifungal drug targets. Current mutagenesis techniques generate genomic rearrangements complicating downstream analysis whereas transposon mutagenesis results in precise integration enabling faster identification of essential genes. Six novel mariner type transposons were identified in A. fumigatus by bioinformatic analysis. These were examined for conserved functional domains within the transposase and interstrain variation in distribution both of which suggest potential activity. An insertion of the Fotl/pogo like transposon Aft1 was found to disrupt the expression of a putative G-protein coupled receptor in strain AF293 which was expressed in other strains lacking this insertion. This transposon excised from the pAft I-zeo construct in-situ however the introduction of a selectable marker within this element prevented transposition. The Aspergillus niger transposon Anti was cloned and demonstrated activity in a phenotypic excision assay however the introduction of a selectable marker eliminated this activity. Attempts at tagging Aspergillus transposons proved unsuccessful therefore experiments were conducted using the Fusarium oxysporum transposon impala, which had been demonstrated to transpose in A. fumigatus but had proven problematic in mutagenesis screens. Variations in germination and growth conditions solved reported problems and this element was used in a random mutagenesis screen to identify several putative essential genes. Medium throughput methodologies were developed and were found to be suitable for integration with current F2G Ltd. proprietary Mycobank technology.
author Hey, Peter
author_facet Hey, Peter
author_sort Hey, Peter
title Characterisation of mariner type transposons in the human opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus and development of tagged transposon mutagenesis tools
title_short Characterisation of mariner type transposons in the human opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus and development of tagged transposon mutagenesis tools
title_full Characterisation of mariner type transposons in the human opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus and development of tagged transposon mutagenesis tools
title_fullStr Characterisation of mariner type transposons in the human opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus and development of tagged transposon mutagenesis tools
title_full_unstemmed Characterisation of mariner type transposons in the human opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus and development of tagged transposon mutagenesis tools
title_sort characterisation of mariner type transposons in the human opportunistic pathogen aspergillus fumigatus and development of tagged transposon mutagenesis tools
publisher University of Manchester
publishDate 2007
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.686245
work_keys_str_mv AT heypeter characterisationofmarinertypetransposonsinthehumanopportunisticpathogenaspergillusfumigatusanddevelopmentoftaggedtransposonmutagenesistools
_version_ 1718694217468870656