Abstract

Small Heat-Shock Proteins (sHSPs) and other proteins bearing alpha-crystallin domains (ACD) participate in defense against heat and oxidative stress and play important roles in cell cycle, cytoskeleton dynamics, and immunological and pathological mechanisms in eukaryotes. However, little is known about these proteins in early-diverging lineages of protists such as the kinetoplastids. Here, ACD-like proteins (ACDp) were investigated in genomes of 61 species of 12 kinetoplastid genera, including Trypanosoma spp. (23 species of mammals, reptiles and frogs), Leishmania spp. (mammals and lizards), trypanosomatids of insects, Phytomonas spp. of plants, and bodonids. Comparison of ACDps based on domain architecture, predicted tertiary structure, phylogeny and genome organization reveals a kinetoplastid evolutionarily conserved repertoire, which diversified prior to trypanosomatid adaptation to parasitic life. We identified 9 ACDp orthologs classified in 8 families of TryACD: four previously recognized (HSP20, Tryp23A, Tryp23B and ATOM69), and four characterized for the first time in kinetoplastids (TryACDP, TrySGT1, TryDYX1C1 and TryNudC). A single copy of each ortholog was identified in each genome alongside TryNudC1/TrypNudC2 homologs and, overall, ACDPs were under strong selection pressures at main phylogenetic lineages. Transcripts of all ACDPs were identified across the life stages of T. cruzi, T. brucei and Leishmania spp., but proteomic profiles suggested that most ACDPs may be species- and stage-regulated. Our findings establish the basis for functional studies, and provided evolutionary and structural support for an underestimated repertoire of ACDps in the kinetoplastids.

Highlights

  • Trypanosomatids (Euglenozoa, Kinetoplastea, Trypanosomatidae) are successful and widespread protists that branched very early from other eukaryotes

  • The previously recognized ACD-like proteins (ACDp) families Hsp20, p23 (p23A and p23B) and ATOM69 were identified in all genomes examined

  • All 8 ACDlike families are composed of orthologs conserved across the trypanosomatids and bodonids examined; most families have homologs in other eukaryotes, but Hsp20 is the only present in prokaryotes and eukaryotes [16]

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Summary

Introduction

Trypanosomatids (Euglenozoa, Kinetoplastea, Trypanosomatidae) are successful and widespread protists that branched very early from other eukaryotes. Proteins bearing α-crystallin domain-like in kinetoplastid protists. Coordenacão de Aperfeicoamento de Pessoal de Nıvel Superior - Finance Code 001). The National Science Foundation, Assembling the Tree of Life program, supported genome sequencing of several kinetoplastids NSF DEB0830056 Assembling the Tree of Life: Phylum Euglenozoa) in the Nucleic Acids Research Facilities at Virginia Commonwealth University. AGCM and LL are beneficiaries of postdoctoral fellowships from CAPES (PROTAX and IINCTEpiAmO, respectively)

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