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Beyond the transcript: Chromatin implications in trans-splicing in Trypanosomatids.


ABSTRACT: Trypanosoma cruzi, Trypanosoma brucei and Leishmania major, usually known as TriTryps, are the causal agents of animal and human sickness, and are characterized by having complex life cycles, alternating between a mammalian host and an insect vector. Their genes are organized in long transcriptional units that give rise to polycistronic transcripts which maturate into mRNA by a process known as trans-splicing. Among those genes, an important subset is composed of multi-copy genes, which play crucial roles in host invasion and immune evasion. Here, we predicted the most likely trans-splicing acceptor sites (TASs) for TriTryps and found that the average chromatin organization is very similar among them with a mild nucleosome depletion at the TASs, and the same layout is observed in most of the genome. A detailed examination of the nucleosome landscapes resulting from different levels of chromatin digestion in T. brucei shows that an MNase-sensitive complex is protecting the TASs, and it is at least partly composed of histones. Additionally, comparative analysis for single and multi-copy genes in T. cruzi revealed a differential chromatin structure at the TASs suggesting a novel mechanism to guarantee the fidelity of trans-splicing in trypanosomatids.

SUBMITTER: Zambrano Siri RT 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC12944795 | biostudies-literature | 2026

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Beyond the transcript: Chromatin implications in trans-splicing in Trypanosomatids.

Zambrano Siri Romina Trinidad RT   Beati Paula P   Inchausti Lucas L   Smircich Pablo P   Alonso Guillermo Daniel GD   Ocampo Josefina J  

PloS one 20260226 2


Trypanosoma cruzi, Trypanosoma brucei and Leishmania major, usually known as TriTryps, are the causal agents of animal and human sickness, and are characterized by having complex life cycles, alternating between a mammalian host and an insect vector. Their genes are organized in long transcriptional units that give rise to polycistronic transcripts which maturate into mRNA by a process known as trans-splicing. Among those genes, an important subset is composed of multi-copy genes, which play cru  ...[more]

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