Vanhamme L, Pays E
Department of Molecular Biology, Free University of Brussels, Rhode Saint Genèse, Belgium.
Microbiol Rev. 1995 Jun;59(2):223-40. doi: 10.1128/mr.59.2.223-240.1995.
Trypanosomes are protozoan agents of major parasitic diseases such as Chagas' disease in South America and sleeping sickness of humans and nagana disease of cattle in Africa. They are transmitted to mammalian hosts by specific insect vectors. Their life cycle consists of a succession of differentiation and growth phases requiring regulated gene expression to adapt to the changing extracellular environment. Typical of such stage-specific expression is that of the major surface antigens of Trypanosoma brucei, procyclin in the procyclic (insect) form and the variant surface glycoprotein (VSG) in the bloodstream (mammalian) form. In trypanosomes, the regulation of gene expression is effected mainly at posttranscriptional levels, since primary transcription of most of the genes occurs in long polycistronic units and is constitutive. The transcripts are processed by transsplicing and polyadenylation under the influence of intergenic polypyrimidine tracts. These events show some developmental regulation. Untranslated sequences of the mRNAs seem to play a prominent role in the stage-specific control of individual gene expression, through a modulation of mRNA abundance. The VSG and procyclin transcription units exhibit particular features that are probably related to the need for a high level of expression. The promoters and RNA polymerase driving the expression of these units resemble those of the ribosomal genes. Their mutually exclusive expression is ensured by controls operating at several levels, including RNA elongation. Antigenic variation in the bloodstream is achieved through DNA rearrangements or alternative activation of the telomeric VSG gene expression sites. Recent discoveries, such as the existence of a novel nucleotide in telomeric DNA and the generation of point mutations in VSG genes, have shed new light on the mechanisms and consequences of antigenic variation.
锥虫是引发主要寄生虫病的原生动物病原体,如南美洲的恰加斯病、人类的昏睡病以及非洲牛的那加那病。它们通过特定的昆虫媒介传播给哺乳动物宿主。其生命周期由一系列分化和生长阶段组成,需要受调控的基因表达来适应不断变化的细胞外环境。布氏锥虫主要表面抗原的表达就是这种阶段特异性表达的典型例子,在前循环(昆虫)形式中是前环素,在血流(哺乳动物)形式中是可变表面糖蛋白(VSG)。在锥虫中,基因表达的调控主要在转录后水平进行,因为大多数基因的初级转录发生在长的多顺反子单元中且是组成型的。转录本在基因间多嘧啶序列的影响下通过反式剪接和聚腺苷酸化进行加工。这些事件表现出一些发育调控。mRNA的非翻译序列似乎通过调节mRNA丰度在单个基因表达的阶段特异性控制中发挥重要作用。VSG和前环素转录单元具有一些特殊特征,可能与高水平表达的需求有关。驱动这些单元表达的启动子和RNA聚合酶类似于核糖体基因的启动子和RNA聚合酶。它们相互排斥的表达通过在多个水平上起作用的调控来确保,包括RNA延伸。血流中的抗原变异是通过DNA重排或端粒VSG基因表达位点的交替激活实现的。最近的发现,如端粒DNA中存在一种新的核苷酸以及VSG基因中产生点突变,为抗原变异的机制和后果提供了新的线索。