TY - JOUR
T1 - Pan-kinome of Legionella expanded by a bioinformatics survey
AU - Krysińska, Marianna
AU - Baranowski, Bartosz
AU - Deszcz, Bartłomiej
AU - Pawłowski, Krzysztof
AU - Gradowski, Marcin
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Drs Vincent Tagliabracci, Anna Muszewska, Marcin Grynberg and Victor Lopez for critical reading of the manuscript. They thank the Tagliabracci lab members for the many intellectually enriching projects on novel kinase families. K.P. was supported by Polish National Agency for Scientific Exchange scholarship 541 PPN/BEK/2018/1/00431 and Polish National Science Centre Grant 2019/33/B/NZ2/01409. M.G. was supported by the Polish National Science Centre Grant 2019/35/N/NZ2/02844. They thank Dr. Burstein for providing the phylogenetic tree of the 41 species of Legionella.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s).
PY - 2022/12
Y1 - 2022/12
N2 - The pathogenic Legionella bacteria are notorious for delivering numerous effector proteins into the host cell with the aim of disturbing and hijacking cellular processes for their benefit. Despite intensive studies, many effectors remain uncharacterized. Motivated by the richness of Legionella effector repertoires and their oftentimes atypical biochemistry, also by several known atypical Legionella effector kinases and pseudokinases discovered recently, we undertook an in silico survey and exploration of the pan-kinome of the Legionella genus, i.e., the union of the kinomes of individual species. In this study, we discovered 13 novel (pseudo)kinase families (all are potential effectors) with the use of non-standard bioinformatic approaches. Together with 16 known families, we present a catalog of effector and non-effector protein kinase-like families within Legionella, available at http://bioinfo.sggw.edu.pl/kintaro/. We analyze and discuss the likely functional roles of the novel predicted kinases. Notably, some of the kinase families are also present in other bacterial taxa, including other pathogens, often phylogenetically very distant from Legionella. This work highlights Nature’s ingeniousness in the pathogen–host arms race and offers a useful resource for the study of infection mechanisms.
AB - The pathogenic Legionella bacteria are notorious for delivering numerous effector proteins into the host cell with the aim of disturbing and hijacking cellular processes for their benefit. Despite intensive studies, many effectors remain uncharacterized. Motivated by the richness of Legionella effector repertoires and their oftentimes atypical biochemistry, also by several known atypical Legionella effector kinases and pseudokinases discovered recently, we undertook an in silico survey and exploration of the pan-kinome of the Legionella genus, i.e., the union of the kinomes of individual species. In this study, we discovered 13 novel (pseudo)kinase families (all are potential effectors) with the use of non-standard bioinformatic approaches. Together with 16 known families, we present a catalog of effector and non-effector protein kinase-like families within Legionella, available at http://bioinfo.sggw.edu.pl/kintaro/. We analyze and discuss the likely functional roles of the novel predicted kinases. Notably, some of the kinase families are also present in other bacterial taxa, including other pathogens, often phylogenetically very distant from Legionella. This work highlights Nature’s ingeniousness in the pathogen–host arms race and offers a useful resource for the study of infection mechanisms.
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U2 - 10.1038/s41598-022-26109-x
DO - 10.1038/s41598-022-26109-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 36526881
AN - SCOPUS:85144111033
SN - 2045-2322
VL - 12
JO - Scientific Reports
JF - Scientific Reports
IS - 1
M1 - 21782
ER -