Metabolomics,Unknown,Transcriptomics,Genomics,Proteomics

Dataset Information

0

Gene expression quantitative trait loci (eQTL) study using the HB3Ã?Dd2 genetic cross progeny of P. falciparum


ABSTRACT: The determinants of transcriptional regulation in malaria parasites remain elusive. The presence of a well-characterized gene expression cascade shared by different Plasmodium falciparum strains could imply that transcriptional regulation and its natural variation do not contribute significantly to the evolution of parasite drug resistance. To clarify the role of transcriptional variation as a source of stain-specific diversity in the most deadly malaria species and to find genetic loci that dictate variations in gene expression, we examined genome-wide expression level polymorphisms (ELPs) in a genetic cross between phenotypically distinct parasite clones. Significant variation in gene expression is observed through direct co-hybridizations of RNA from different P. falciparum clones. Nearly 18% of genes were regulated by a significant eQTL. The genetic determinants of most of these ELPs resided in hotspots that are physically distant from their targets. The most prominent regulatory locus, influencing 269 transcripts, coincided with a Chromosome 5 amplification event carrying the drug resistance gene, pfmdr1, and 13 other genes. Drug selection pressure in the Dd2 parental clone lineage led not only to a copy number change in the pfmdr1 gene but also to increased copies of putative neighboring regulatory factors that, in turn, broadly influence the transcriptional network. Previously unrecognized transcriptional variation, controlled by polymorphic regulatory genes and possibly master regulators within large copy number variants, contributes to sweeping phenotypic evolution in drug-resistant malaria parasites. Keywords: Segregation patterns of gene expression levels. A total of 36 test parasite samples (Dd2, HB3, and progeny) from a single time point in the parasite life cycle (18 hours post RBC invasion) were co-hybridized to a common reference HB3 sample, each a single replicate.

ORGANISM(S): Plasmodium falciparum

SUBMITTER: Michael Ferdig 

PROVIDER: E-GEOD-12515 | biostudies-arrayexpress |

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-arrayexpress

altmetric image

Publications

Regulatory hotspots in the malaria parasite genome dictate transcriptional variation.

Gonzales Joseph M JM   Patel Jigar J JJ   Ponmee Napawan N   Jiang Lei L   Tan Asako A   Maher Steven P SP   Wuchty Stefan S   Rathod Pradipsinh K PK   Ferdig Michael T MT  

PLoS biology 20080901 9


The determinants of transcriptional regulation in malaria parasites remain elusive. The presence of a well-characterized gene expression cascade shared by different Plasmodium falciparum strains could imply that transcriptional regulation and its natural variation do not contribute significantly to the evolution of parasite drug resistance. To clarify the role of transcriptional variation as a source of stain-specific diversity in the most deadly malaria species and to find genetic loci that dic  ...[more]

Similar Datasets

2008-11-20 | GSE12515 | GEO
2015-12-09 | E-GEOD-75807 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2015-12-09 | GSE75807 | GEO
2021-01-31 | GSE126876 | GEO
2011-11-01 | E-GEOD-32211 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2008-11-14 | E-GEOD-9724 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2016-05-06 | GSE77499 | GEO
2011-10-31 | E-GEOD-32485 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2010-06-10 | E-GEOD-2265 | biostudies-arrayexpress
2005-05-01 | GSE2265 | GEO