Back to Search Start Over

Using viromes to predict novel immune proteins in non-model organisms

Authors :
Linda Wegley Kelly
Craig E. Nelson
Yan Wei Lim
Forest Rohwer
Andreas F. Haas
Robert Edwards
Steven D. Quistad
Genivaldo G. Z. Silva
Source :
Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Immunity is mostly studied in a few model organisms, leaving the majority of immune systems on the planet unexplored. To characterize the immune systems of non-model organisms alternative approaches are required. Viruses manipulate host cell biology through the expression of proteins that modulate the immune response. We hypothesized that metagenomic sequencing of viral communities would be useful to identify both known and unknown host immune proteins. To test this hypothesis, a mock human virome was generated and compared to the human proteome using tBLASTn, resulting in 36 proteins known to be involved in immunity. This same pipeline was then applied to reef-building coral, a non-model organism that currently lacks traditional molecular tools like transgenic animals, gene-editing capabilities, and in vitro cell cultures. Viromes isolated from corals and compared with the predicted coral proteome resulted in 2503 coral proteins, including many proteins involved with pathogen sensing and apoptosis. There were also 159 coral proteins predicted to be involved with coral immunity but currently lacking any functional annotation. The pipeline described here provides a novel method to rapidly predict host immune components that can be applied to virtually any system with the potential to discover novel immune proteins.

Details

ISSN :
14712954
Volume :
283
Issue :
1837
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings. Biological sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4183f723172e40cd9aae4e7fd4bd2831