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Mem Inst Oswaldo Cruz, Rio de Janeiro, Vol. 97(3) 2002, pp. 343-346 SHORT COMMUNICATION
Charaterization of Leishmania major Friedlin Telomeric Terminus Miguel Angel Chiurillo, José Luis Ramírez+
Laboratorio de Genetica Molecular,
Instituto de Biología Experimental, Universidad Central de Venezuela,
Apdo. 47525, 1041-A, Caracas, Venezuela and Centro de Biotecnología,
Instituto de Estudios Avanzados, Caracas, Venezuela This work was supported by CONICIT grant 95000524 to JLR and post-doctoral fellowship 9900034 to MAC. Received 27 March 2001 Code Number: oc02065 Here we have characterized Leishmania major (Friedlin) telomeric terminus (the very end) using recombinants obtained by a vector-adaptor cloning protocol. As in L. donovani, the last nine nucleotides of L. major terminus are 5'-GGTTAGGGT-OH 3', differing from Trypanosoma cruzi and T. brucei terminus 5'GGGTTAGGG-OH 3', thus indicating that these sequences are genus specific. We have also made a comparative analysis between L. major and L. donovani telomere-associated sequences, and described a novel non-repeated telomeric associated sequence common to L. major low molecular weight chromosomal bands.
Key words: Leishmania major - telomeric terminus - cloning In most eukaryotes telomere structure is conserved; a typical telomeric DNA sequence consists of tandemly arrayed G-rich repeats running 5' to 3' towards the end of the chromosome, ending in a single strand chain (overhang) of variable length. Phylogenetically unrelated organisms such as vertebrates and Kinetoplastida share identical telomeric repetitions (TTAGGG)n, suggesting common basic mechanisms for generation and maintenance of telomeres. The single strand nature of the overhang was first demonstrated in Tetrahymena and Oxytrichia, and later confirmed for most eukaryotes (Klobutcher et al. 1981). The size of the overhang is species specific, varying from 16 nucleotides in Oxytricha to 50-100 nucleotides in mouse and human (Klobutcher et al. 1981, Wright et al. 1997). The importance of the overhang is suggested by the fact that mutants disrupting the nature of the G-rich strand eliminate telomere function (Van Steensel et al. 1998). The overhang is a dynamic structure, interacting with other overhangs, specialized proteins, and the nuclear membrane (Henderson 1995). In mammalian cells (Griffith et al. 1999), and recently in Trypanosoma brucei (Muñoz-Jordán et al. 2001), it has been demonstrated that telomeres have terminal loops, or T-loops, where the single strand region is tucked back inside the double-stranded portion of the telomere, stabilized by specialized proteins, thus protecting the chromosome terminus. The subtelomeric region consists, of unique sequences, or repetitive sequences with variable lengths and degrees of repetitiveness which are often species-specific (Henderson 1995). Some of these sequences are restricted to the telomeres and participate in telomeric function. Chromosomal rearrangements at subtelomeric and telomeric regions have been implicated in various phenomena ranging from chromosome length polymorphisms in Leishmania sp., to the generation of antigenic variants in T. brucei and Plasmodium falciparum (Corcoran et al. 1988, Ravel et al. 1995, Rudenko et al. 1996). Recently, Sunkin et al. (2000) have shown that size differences between L. major chromosome 1 homologues is largely restricted to variation of both the number and content of sub-telomeric repetitive elements, suggesting intra-chromosomal rearrangement events. In previous works we demonstrated (Chiurillo et al. 1999, 2000) that telomeres can be cloned by complementing the last nine nucleotides of the overhang with an adaptor sequence. With this procedure there is no need to alter the overhang, and the phase of the sequence of hexameric repeats can be deducted. Using this protocol, we have here cloned and characterized telomeric sequences of L. major Friedlin (MHOM/IL/81/Friedlin), the selected organism of the Leishmania Genome Sequencing Project (Bastien et al. 1998). To select the restriction enzyme for cloning, L. major genomic DNA was digested with endonucleases Pst I, Rsa I and Sau 3AI, and the corresponding Southern blots were hybridized with radiolabeled telomeric oligonucleotide (CCCTAA)3 (not shown). From these experiments Pst I was chosen because the size of the fragments produced (2-12 Kbp) was convenient for cloning in pBluescript. In addition, the presence of a unique Pst I cutting site within this plasmid allowed us to ligate the vector-adaptor to Leishmania high molecular weight DNA prior to restriction digestion. Thus by reducing the number of unspecific fragment ends, we expected to increase the probability of successful hits between the adaptor and the telomeric overhang. The rest of the cloning protocol was done as described by Chiurillo et al. (1999). Three hundred and ninety white colonies were screened with a radioactive telomeric probe, out of which, 23 were positive. Insert size of a randomly selected group of recombinants ranged from 0.85 to 4.5 Kbp. Nine of these recombinants (LmFtel) were partially sequenced with T3 and T7 primers using an automated ABI 377 instrument (Cesaan IVIC). Computer analysis was done with a DNAMAN 3.2 software (Lynnon BioSoft). Nucleotide sequences reported in this paper are available in the GenBankTM database under accession numbers: AY014832-35. Sequence readings from T3 primer side (Fig. 1) showed that the last nine nucleotides of all recombinants complemented the adaptor with the sequence 5'-ACCCTAACC-OH 3', followed by variable numbers of 5'-ACCCTA-3' repeats. Three recombinants presented hexameric repeats followed by two sequence blocks of 102 bp each. These blocks, or LCTAS (Leishmania Conserved Telomere-Associated Sequence), were first reported in L. major by Fu and Barker (1998). Fig. 2A shows a sequence comparison of L. major and L. donovani LCTAS; the former had 4 to 5 copies of imperfect octamers and a 62-bp sequence (Chiurillo et al. 2000), whereas L. donovani shows variable numbers (1-11) of a well defined octamer repeat (5'-TGGTCATG-3'), and a 62 bp sequence (Fig. 2A) (Chiurillo et al. 2000). Sequence specificity and high copy number of L. donovani LCTAS have been exploited in the design of a PCR assay that detects L. donovani and L. infantum with high sensitivity (Chiurillo et al. 2001). Eight recombinants (Table) exhibited a 781 bp non-repeated telomeric associated sequence (NRTAS781) not previously reported in GenBank (AY014835). This sequence contained a Pst I site that, combined with pBluescript insert capacity, may explain its preferred cloning. In this group of recombinants two had two LCTAS copies. The presence of LCTAS in some recombinants confirms prior observations that L. donovani and L. major have two types of telomeres, those with hexameric repeats followed directly by NRTAS, and a second type with LCTAS blocks inserted between the terminal hexamers and the NRTAS (Fu & Barker 1998, Chiurillo et al. 2000). When L. major chromoblots were probed with LmFtel 2A11-NRTAS (devoid of hexamers or LCTAS) most of the bands recognized (except for the compression and the well) were in the low molecular weight range, including the two bands corresponding to chromosome 1 homologues (Fig. 3, arrows). NRTAS781 was not reported in the complete sequence of chromosome 1(AE001274) (Myler et al. 1999), and we suspect that it was missed during sequence reconstruction of one of the telomeres. As these authors stated, the sequence of one chromosomal end was derived from a chimerical cosmid containing parts of two different chromosomes (other than 1) (Myler et al. 1999, Sunkin et al. 2000). Clone LmFtel 1E8 (the ninth recombinant) had two LCTAS blocks followed by a NRTAS (NRTAS1E8) that has been previously found in L. major (AF031202) and L. donovani (AF095768). The clone had a 4.5 Kbp insert with 320 bp made of hexamers and LACTS. DNA readings from the T7 side revealed a non-coding sequence with no homology in GenBank database (AYO14832). As found in L. donovani telomeres (Chiurillo et al. 2000), the first three nucleotides of the overhang ACC/GGT are present in the transitions between hexamers and LCTAS blocks (prior or after), and hexamers and NRTAS (Figs 1, 2A, B). These similarities suggest a common origin of these sequences. An equal situation is found in T. cruzi, T. brucei and Giardia. In Trypanosoma the first nucleotides of the overhang (5'-GGGTTAGGG-3') are GGG (Beck 1997, Chiurillo et al. 1999), which is the same trinucleotide connecting the last hexamer with the unique subtelomeric sequence. In Giardia (Adam 1992) all rDNA/telomere junctions have the sequence CCCCGG, which contains the first three nucleotides of Giardia telomeric repeat (CCCTA). It has been suggested that this junction could be the healing site of chromosomal breakage (Adam 1992). Although no chromosome rupture phenomena has been documented in Kinetoplastida, it is likely that if such an event takes place, the trinucleotides described could provide templates for telomerase elongation or any other chromosome healing mechanism. In ciliates, primary sequence and biochemical experiments indicate that Oxytricha and Stylonychia telomerase RNA template 5'AAAACCCC-3' is permutated in Euplotes aediculatus to 5'-CAAAACCC-3' (Lingner et al. 1994). Although Kinetoplastida telomerase activity has been demonstrated (Cano et al. 1999), no telomerase gene has been cloned and little is known about its regulation. However, from the evidences of this work we would like to suggest that Leishmania telomerase adds 5'-TAGGGT-3' blocks to the growing telomeres, and from results of other works, Trypanosoma (Beck 1997, Chiurillo et al. 1999) adds 5'-TTAGGG-3' blocks, the same but permutated sequence. Thus a divergent evolution in end-processing mechanisms may have occurred between the two genera. Possibly the precursor of the Trypanosomatidae family suffered a shift change in the RNA template region that caused this divergence.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
To Drs Ken Stuart and Peter Myler for L. major Friedlin strain. REFERENCES
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