Options
Draft genome of the filarial nematode parasite Brugia malayi
ISSN
0036-8075
Date Issued
2007
Author(s)
Ghedin, Elodie
Wang, S.
Spiro, David
Caler, Elisabet
Zhao, Q. I.
Crabtree, Jonathan
Allen, Jonathan E.
Delcher, Arthur L.
Guiliano, David B.
Miranda-Saavedra, Diego
Angiuoli, Samuel V.
Creasy, Todd
Amedeo, Paolo
Haas, Brian J.
El-Sayed, Najib M.
Wortman, Jennifer R.
Feldblyum, Tamara
Tallon, Luke
Schatz, Michael
Shumway, Martin
Koo, Hean
Salzberg, Steven L.
Schobel, Seth
Pertea, Mihaela
Pop, Mihai
White, Owen
Barton, Geoffrey J.
Carlow, Clotilde K. S.
Crawford, Michael J.
Daub, Jennifer
Dimmic, Matthew W.
Estes, Chris F.
Foster, Jeremy M.
Ganatra, Mehul
Gregory, William F.
Johnson, Nicholas M.
Jin, Jinming
Komuniecki, Richard
Korf, Ian
Kumar, Sanjay
Laney, Sandra
Li, Ben-Wen
Lindblom, Tim H.
Lustigman, Sara
Ma, Dong
Maina, Claude V.
Martin, David M. A.
McCarter, James P.
McReynolds, Larry
Mitreva, Makedonka
Nutman, Thomas B.
Parkinson, John
Peregrin-Alvarez, Jose M.
Poole, Catherine
Ren, Qinghu
Saunders, Lori
Sluder, Ann E.
Smith, Katherine
Stanke, Mario
Unnasch, Thomas R.
Ware, Jenna
Wei, Aguan D.
Weil, Gary
Williams, Deryck J.
Zhang, Y.
Fraser-Liggett, Claire M.
Slatko, Barton
Blaxter, Mark L.
Scott, Alan L.
DOI
10.1126/science.1145406
Abstract
Parasitic nematodes that cause elephantiasis and river blindness threaten hundreds of millions of people in the developing world. We have sequenced the similar to 90 megabase (Mb) genome of the human filarial parasite Brugia malayi and predict similar to 11,500 protein coding genes in 71 Mb of robustly assembled sequence. Comparative analysis with the free-living, model nematode Caenorhabditis elegans revealed that, despite these genes having maintained little conservation of local synteny during similar to 350 million years of evolution, they largely remain in linkage on chromosomal units. More than 100 conserved operons were identified. Analysis of the predicted proteome provides evidence for adaptations of B. malayi to niches in its human and vector hosts and insights into the molecular basis of a mutualistic relationship with its Wolbachia endosymbiont. These findings offer a foundation for rational drug design.