Cross kingdom analysis of putative quadruplex-forming sequences in fungal genomes: novel antifungal targets to ameliorate fungal pathogenicity?
Cross kingdom analysis of putative quadruplex-forming sequences in fungal genomes: novel antifungal targets to ameliorate fungal pathogenicity?
Abstract Fungi contribute to upwards of 1.5 million human deaths annually, are involved in the spoilage of up to a third of food crops, and have a devastating effect on plant and animal biodiversity. Moreover, this already significant issue is exacerbated by a rise in antifungal resistance and a critical requirement for novel drug targets. Quadruplexes are four-stranded secondary structures in nucleic acids which can regulate processes such as transcription, translation, replication, and recombination. They are also found in genes linked to virulence in microbes, and quadruplex-binding ligands have been demonstrated to eliminate drug resistant pathogens. Using a computational approach, we identified putative quadruplex-forming sequences (PQS) in 1362 genomes across the fungal kingdom and explored their potential involvement in virulence, drug resistance, and pathogenicity. Here we present the largest analysis of PQS in fungi and identified significant heterogeneity of these sequences throughout phyla, genera, and species. Moreover, PQS were genetically conserved. Notably, loss of PQS in cryptococci and aspergilli was associated with pathogenicity. PQS in the clinically important pathogens Aspergillus fumigatus, Cryptococcus neoformans, and Candida albicans were located within genes (particularly coding regions), mRNA, repeat regions, mobile elements, tRNA, ncRNA, rRNA, and the centromere. Genes containing PQS in these organisms were found to be primarily associated with metabolism, nucleic acid binding, transporter activity, and protein modification. Finally, PQS were found in over 100 genes associated with virulence, drug resistance, or key biological processes in these pathogenic fungi and were found in genes which were highly upregulated during germination, hypoxia, oxidative stress, iron limitation, and in biofilms. Taken together, quadruplexes in fungi could present interesting novel targets to ameliorate fungal virulence and overcome drug resistance.
Boh¨¢lov¨¢ Nat¨¢lia、Bidula Stefan、Warner Emily F.、Br¨¢zda V¨¢clav、Waller Zo? A. E.
Institute of Biophysics of the Czech Academy of Sciences||Department of Experimental Biology, Faculty of Science, Masaryk UniversitySchool of Biological Sciences, University of East AngliaSchool of Clinical Medicine, University of CambridgeInstitute of Biophysics of the Czech Academy of SciencesUCL School of Pharmacy
基础医学微生物学分子生物学
FungiG-quadruplexesi-motifsin-silicovirulencedrug resistance
Boh¨¢lov¨¢ Nat¨¢lia,Bidula Stefan,Warner Emily F.,Br¨¢zda V¨¢clav,Waller Zo? A. E..Cross kingdom analysis of putative quadruplex-forming sequences in fungal genomes: novel antifungal targets to ameliorate fungal pathogenicity?[EB/OL].(2025-03-28)[2025-05-31].https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.09.23.310581.点此复制
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