Catalogue Search | MBRL
Search Results Heading
Explore the vast range of titles available.
MBRLSearchResults
-
DisciplineDiscipline
-
Is Peer ReviewedIs Peer Reviewed
-
Item TypeItem Type
-
SubjectSubject
-
YearFrom:-To:
-
More FiltersMore FiltersSourceLanguage
Done
Filters
Reset
50
result(s) for
"Elde, Nels C"
Sort by:
Regulatory activities of transposable elements: from conflicts to benefits
by
Elde, Nels C.
,
Feschotte, Cédric
,
Chuong, Edward B.
in
631/136/2444
,
631/136/532
,
631/181/2474
2017
Key Points
Transposable elements (TEs) are increasingly recognized as a potent source of regulatory sequences in eukaryotic genomes
The selfish replication cycle of TEs drove the evolution of finely tuned regulatory activities that favoured their propagation and has predisposed them to be co-opted for the regulation of host genes
There is a growing number of examples of TE-derived sequences that have been co-opted to regulate important biological processes in organismal development and physiology
Dysfunction of TE-derived regulatory sequences is also emerging as a potential driver of diseases including cancer and autoimmunity
Functional genomics and genome-editing technologies herald an exciting era for understanding the biological effect of TEs
Transposable elements (TEs) are widely known for their deleterious consequences of selfish propagation and mutagenesis. However, as described in this Review, TEs also provide hosts with rich, beneficial gene-regulatory machinery in the form of regulatory DNA elements and TE-derived gene products. The authors highlight the diverse regulatory contributions of TEs to organismal physiology and pathology, provide a framework for responsibly assigning functional roles to TEs and offer visions for the future.
Transposable elements (TEs) are a prolific source of tightly regulated, biochemically active non-coding elements, such as transcription factor-binding sites and non-coding RNAs. Many recent studies reinvigorate the idea that these elements are pervasively co-opted for the regulation of host genes. We argue that the inherent genetic properties of TEs and the conflicting relationships with their hosts facilitate their recruitment for regulatory functions in diverse genomes. We review recent findings supporting the long-standing hypothesis that the waves of TE invasions endured by organisms for eons have catalysed the evolution of gene-regulatory networks. We also discuss the challenges of dissecting and interpreting the phenotypic effect of regulatory activities encoded by TEs in health and disease.
Journal Article
Regulatory evolution of innate immunity through co-option of endogenous retroviruses
by
Elde, Nels C.
,
Feschotte, Cédric
,
Chuong, Edward B.
in
Animals
,
DNA-Binding Proteins - genetics
,
Endogenous Retroviruses - genetics
2016
Endogenous retroviruses (ERVs) are abundant in mammalian genomes and contain sequences modulating transcription. The impact of ERV propagation on the evolution of gene regulation remains poorly understood. We found that ERVs have shaped the evolution of a transcriptional network underlying the interferon (IFN) response, a major branch of innate immunity, and that lineage-specific ERVs have dispersed numerous IFN-inducible enhancers independently in diverse mammalian genomes. CRISPR-Cas9 deletion of a subset of these ERV elements in the human genome impaired expression of adjacent IFN-induced genes and revealed their involvement in the regulation of essential immune functions, including activation of the AIM2 inflammasome. Although these regulatory sequences likely arose in ancient viruses, they now constitute a dynamic reservoir of IFN-inducible enhancers fueling genetic innovation in mammalian immune defenses.
Journal Article
Escape from bacterial iron piracy through rapid evolution of transferrin
by
Barber, Matthew F.
,
Elde, Nels C.
in
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Amino Acid Substitution
,
Amino acids
2014
Iron sequestration provides an innate defense, termed nutritional immunity, leading pathogens to scavenge iron from hosts. Although the molecular basis of this battle for iron is established, its potential as a force for evolution at host-pathogen interfaces is unknown. We show that the iron transport protein transferrin is engaged in ancient and ongoing evolutionary conflicts with TbpA, a transferrin surface receptor from bacteria. Single substitutions in transferrin at rapidly evolving sites reverse TbpA binding, providing a mechanism to counteract bacterial iron piracy among great apes. Furthermore, the C2 transferrin polymorphism in humans evades TbpA variants from Haemophilus influenzae, revealing a functional basis for standing genetic variation. These findings identify a central role for nutritional immunity in the persistent evolutionary conflicts between primates and bacterial pathogens.
Journal Article
Signatures of host–pathogen evolutionary conflict reveal MISTR—A conserved MItochondrial STress Response network
2020
Host–pathogen conflicts leave genetic signatures in genes that are critical for host defense functions. Using these “molecular scars” as a guide to discover gene functions, we discovered a vertebrate-specific MI tochondrial ST ress R esponse (MISTR) circuit. MISTR proteins are associated with electron transport chain (ETC) factors and activated by stress signals such as interferon gamma (IFNγ) and hypoxia. Upon stress, ultraconserved microRNAs (miRNAs) down-regulate MISTR1(NDUFA4) followed by replacement with paralogs MItochondrial STress Response A nti V iral (MISTRAV) and/or MItochondrial STress Response H ypoxia (MISTRH). While cells lacking MISTR1(NDUFA4) are more sensitive to chemical and viral apoptotic triggers, cells lacking MISTRAV or expressing the squirrelpox virus-encoded vMISTRAV exhibit resistance to the same insults. Rapid evolution signatures across primate genomes for MISTR1(NDUFA4) and MISTRAV indicate recent and ongoing conflicts with pathogens. MISTR homologs are also found in plants, yeasts, a fish virus, and an algal virus indicating ancient origins and suggesting diverse means of altering mitochondrial function under stress. The discovery of MISTR circuitry highlights the use of evolution-guided studies to reveal fundamental biological processes.
Journal Article
cGAS-mediated stabilization of IFI16 promotes innate signaling during herpes simplex virus infection
2015
Interferon γ-inducible protein 16 (IFI16) and cGMP-AMP synthase (cGAS) have both been proposed to detect herpesviral DNA directly in herpes simplex virus (HSV)-infected cells and initiate interferon regulatory factor-3 signaling, but it has been unclear how two DNA sensors could both be required for this response. We therefore investigated their relative roles in human foreskin fibroblasts (HFFs) infected with HSV or transfected with plasmid DNA. siRNA depletion studies showed that both are required for the production of IFN in infected HFFs. We found that cGAS shows low production of cGMP-AMP in infected cells, but instead cGAS is partially nuclear in normal human fibroblasts and keratinocytes, interacts with IFI16 in fibroblasts, and promotes the stability of IFI16. IFI16 is associated with viral DNA and targets to viral genome complexes, consistent with it interacting directly with viral DNA. Our results demonstrate that IFI16 and cGAS cooperate in a novel way to sense nuclear herpesviral DNA and initiate innate signaling.
Significance Interferon γ-inducible protein 16 (IFI16) and cGMP-AMP synthase (cGAS) have both been proposed to directly detect herpesviral DNA in herpes simplex virus (HSV)-infected cells and initiate interferon regulatory factor-3 signaling, but it has been unclear how two DNA sensors could both be required. Both are required in human fibroblasts for detection of HSV and transfected DNAs. We found evidence that IFI16 plays a direct role in HSV DNA sensing, whereas cGAS produces low amounts of cGAMP and promotes the stability of IFI16. Our results demonstrate a new function for cGAS in the maintenance of normal levels of IFI16 and provide an explanation for the multiple proposed DNA sensors.
Journal Article
The evolutionary conundrum of pathogen mimicry
2009
Key Points
A wide range of pathogens use the strategy of mimicking host factors to gain selective advantages at host–pathogen interfaces.
Pathogen-encoded mimics can arise by horizontal gene transfer and divergence or independently, by convergent evolution. Some mimics mirror host functions (known as perfect mimicry), whereas others perform different functions (known as imperfect mimicry) to subvert host cellular processes.
Mimics impinge on key cellular processes, including the cell cycle, apoptosis, cytoskeletal dynamics, membrane traffic and immunity.
Mimicry presents a conundrum to host systems, which must discriminate self from mimics, and also to pathogens, which pay a fitness cost to deploy mimics. Similar trade-offs can influence the evolution of mimicry in ecological settings (for example, insect mimics).
Hosts can evolve to counteract mimicry in molecular arms races of adaptations. For example, the antiviral protein kinase R, which is the target of virus-encoded substrate mimics, has a highly flexible interaction interface and adapts on multiple surfaces to disfavour mimics.
The extent to which highly conserved cellular factors evolve to counteract mimics is an open question. Several routes seem to be available, including gene duplications followed by functional diversification.
A diverse range of pathogens produce molecules that mimic host cell components to subvert host cell functions. Elde and Malik highlight the various types of mimicry used by pathogens and the measures that host cells use to counteract the mimics' effects.
Evolutionary conflicts involving mimicry are found throughout nature. Diverse pathogens produce a range of 'mimics' that resemble host components in both form and function. Such mimics subvert crucial cellular processes, including the cell cycle, apoptosis, cytoskeletal dynamics and immunity. Here, we review the mounting evidence that mimicry of host processes is a highly successful strategy for pathogens. Discriminating mimics can be crucial for host survival, and host factors exist that effectively counteract mimics, using strategies that combine rapid evolution and an unexpected degree of flexibility in protein–protein interactions. Even in these instances, mimicry may alter the evolutionary course of fundamental cellular processes in host organisms.
Journal Article
Wham: Identifying Structural Variants of Biological Consequence
2015
Existing methods for identifying structural variants (SVs) from short read datasets are inaccurate. This complicates disease-gene identification and efforts to understand the consequences of genetic variation. In response, we have created Wham (Whole-genome Alignment Metrics) to provide a single, integrated framework for both structural variant calling and association testing, thereby bypassing many of the difficulties that currently frustrate attempts to employ SVs in association testing. Here we describe Wham, benchmark it against three other widely used SV identification tools-Lumpy, Delly and SoftSearch-and demonstrate Wham's ability to identify and associate SVs with phenotypes using data from humans, domestic pigeons, and vaccinia virus. Wham and all associated software are covered under the MIT License and can be freely downloaded from github (https://github.com/zeeev/wham), with documentation on a wiki (http://zeeev.github.io/wham/). For community support please post questions to https://www.biostars.org/.
Journal Article
Microbe transmission from pet shop to lab-reared zebrafish reveals a pathogenic birnavirus
by
Elde, Nels C.
,
Janik, Andrew J.
,
Gagnon, James A.
in
Amino acids
,
Animals
,
Animals, Laboratory - microbiology
2024
Zebrafish are popular research organisms selected for laboratory use due in part to widespread availability from the pet trade. Many contemporary colonies of laboratory zebrafish are maintained in aquaculture facilities that monitor and aim to curb infections that can negatively affect colony health and confound experiments. The impact of laboratory control on the microbial constituents associated with zebrafish in research environments compared to the pet trade are unclear. Diseases of unknown causes are common in both environments. We conducted a metatranscriptomic survey to broadly compare the zebrafish-associated microbes in pet trade and laboratory environments. We detected many microbes in animals from the pet trade that were not found in laboratory animals. Cohousing experiments revealed several transmissible microbes including a newly described non-enveloped, double-stranded RNA virus in the Birnaviridae family we name Rocky Mountain birnavirus (RMBV). Infections were detected in asymptomatic animals from the pet trade, but when transmitted to laboratory animals RMBV was associated with pronounced antiviral responses and hemorrhagic disease. These experiments highlight the pet trade as a distinct source of diverse microbes that associate with zebrafish and establish a paradigm for the discovery of newly described pathogenic viruses and other infectious microbes that can be developed for study in the laboratory.
Journal Article
Overlapping Patterns of Rapid Evolution in the Nucleic Acid Sensors cGAS and OAS1 Suggest a Common Mechanism of Pathogen Antagonism and Escape
by
Hartley, Melissa K.
,
Elde, Nels C.
,
Hagan, Celia
in
2',5'-Oligoadenylate Synthetase - genetics
,
Alternative Splicing
,
Amino Acid Sequence
2015
A diverse subset of pattern recognition receptors (PRRs) detects pathogen-associated nucleic acids to initiate crucial innate immune responses in host organisms. Reflecting their importance for host defense, pathogens encode various countermeasures to evade or inhibit these immune effectors. PRRs directly engaged by pathogen inhibitors often evolve under recurrent bouts of positive selection that have been described as molecular 'arms races.' Cyclic GMP-AMP synthase (cGAS) was recently identified as a key PRR. Upon binding cytoplasmic double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) from various viruses, cGAS generates the small nucleotide secondary messenger cGAMP to signal activation of innate defenses. Here we report an evolutionary history of cGAS with recurrent positive selection in the primate lineage. Recent studies indicate a high degree of structural similarity between cGAS and 2'-5'-oligoadenylate synthase 1 (OAS1), a PRR that detects double-stranded RNA (dsRNA), despite low sequence identity between the respective genes. We present comprehensive comparative evolutionary analysis of cGAS and OAS1 primate sequences and observe positive selection at nucleic acid binding interfaces and distributed throughout both genes. Our data revealed homologous regions with strong signatures of positive selection, suggesting common mechanisms employed by unknown pathogen encoded inhibitors and similar modes of evasion from antagonism. Our analysis of cGAS diversification also identified alternately spliced forms missing multiple sites under positive selection. Further analysis of selection on the OAS family in primates, which comprises OAS1, OAS2, OAS3 and OASL, suggests a hypothesis where gene duplications and domain fusion events result in paralogs that provide another means of escaping pathogen inhibitors. Together our comparative evolutionary analysis of cGAS and OAS provides new insights into distinct mechanisms by which key molecular sentinels of the innate immune system have adapted to circumvent viral-encoded inhibitors.
Journal Article
Evolution of STAT2 resistance to flavivirus NS5 occurred multiple times despite genetic constraints
2024
Zika and dengue virus nonstructural protein 5 antagonism of STAT2, a critical interferon signaling transcription factor, to suppress the host interferon response is required for viremia and pathogenesis in a vertebrate host. This affects viral species tropism, as mouse STAT2 resistance renders only immunocompromised or humanized STAT2 mice infectable. Here, we explore how STAT2 evolution impacts antagonism. By measuring the susceptibility of 38 diverse STAT2 proteins, we demonstrate that resistance arose numerous times in mammalian evolution. In four species, resistance requires distinct sets of multiple amino acid changes that often individually disrupt STAT2 signaling. This reflects an evolutionary ridge where progressive resistance is balanced by the need to maintain STAT2 function. Furthermore, resistance may come with a fitness cost, as resistance that arose early in lemur evolution was subsequently lost in some lemur lineages. These findings underscore that while it is possible to evolve resistance to antagonism, complex evolutionary trajectories are required to avoid detrimental host fitness consequences.
Zika and Dengue virus non-structural protein 5 can antagonise STAT2 modulating the host response and this interaction is involved in determining tropism. Here the authors show mammals independently evolved resistance to flavivirus NS5 multiple times, involving complex genetic changes in STAT2 which balance viral defence whilst maintaining STAT2’s critical functions.
Journal Article