Gene duplication in the genome of parasitic Giardia lamblia


Autoria(s): Sun, Jun; Jiang, Huifeng; Flores, Roberto; Wen, Jianfan
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

Background: Giardia are a group of widespread intestinal protozoan parasites in a number of vertebrates. Much evidence from G. lamblia indicated they might be the most primitive extant eukaryotes. When and how such a group of the earliest branching unicellular eukaryotes developed the ability to successfully parasitize the latest branching higher eukaryotes (vertebrates) is an intriguing question. Gene duplication has long been thought to be the most common mechanism in the production of primary resources for the origin of evolutionary novelties. In order to parse the evolutionary trajectory of Giardia parasitic lifestyle, here we carried out a genome-wide analysis about gene duplication patterns in G. lamblia. Results: Although genomic comparison showed that in G. lamblia the contents of many fundamental biologic pathways are simplified and the whole genome is very compact, in our study 40% of its genes were identified as duplicated genes. Evolutionary distance analyses of these duplicated genes indicated two rounds of large scale duplication events had occurred in G. lamblia genome. Functional annotation of them further showed that the majority of recent duplicated genes are VSPs (Variant-specific Surface Proteins), which are essential for the successful parasitic life of Giardia in hosts. Based on evolutionary comparison with their hosts, it was found that the rapid expansion of VSPs in G. lamblia is consistent with the evolutionary radiation of placental mammals. Conclusions: Based on the genome-wide analysis of duplicated genes in G. lamblia, we found that gene duplication was essential for the origin and evolution of Giardia parasitic lifestyle. The recent expansion of VSPs uniquely occurring in G. lamblia is consistent with the increment of its hosts. Therefore we proposed a hypothesis that the increment of Giradia hosts might be the driving force for the rapid expansion of VSPs.

We thank Peru's Instituto de Recursos Naturales (INRENA) for permission to conduct research in Manu Park, the Matsigenka residents of Tayakome and Yomybato for their hospitality, the Matsigenka spotters for their help during the censuses, and J. Terborgh for his support. We were funded by the National Geographic Society's Committee for Research and Exploration, the Leverhulme Trust, the Yunnan provincial government ((sic) 20080A001) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (0902281081) to DWY.

Identificador

http://159.226.149.42/handle/152453/5973

http://www.irgrid.ac.cn/handle/1471x/49062

Direitos

Gene duplication in the genome of parasitic Giardia lamblia

Fonte

Sun, Jun; Jiang, Huifeng; Flores, Roberto; Wen, Jianfan.Gene duplication in the genome of parasitic Giardia lamblia,10,,(SCI-E ):We thank Peru's Instituto de Recursos Naturales (INRENA) for permission to conduct research in Manu Park, the Matsigenka residents of Tayakome and Yomybato for their hospitality, the Matsigenka spotters for their help during the censuses, and J. Terborgh for his support. We were funded by the National Geographic Society's Committee for Research and Exploration, the Leverhulme Trust, the Yunnan provincial government ((sic) 20080A001) and the Chinese Academy of Sciences (0902281081) to DWY.

Palavras-Chave #Evolutionary Biology; Genetics & Heredity
Tipo

期刊论文