[Frontiers in Bioscience 16, 2069-2085, June 1, 2011]

Lights and shadows on gene organization and regulation of gene expression in Leishmania

Jose M. Requena

Centro de Biologia Molecular Severo Ochoa (CSIC-UAM), Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Madrid, Spain

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. Abstract
2. Introduction
3. Chromosomal organization and gene transcription
4. Copy number of genes and regulation of gene expression
5. Regulation of mRNA processing
6. Regulation of mRNA stability through cis-acting elements
7. Control of mRNA translation
8. Trans-acting factors and their involvement in specific regulatory mechanisms of gene expression
9. Regulation at the post-translational level
10. Conclusions and perspectives
11. Acknowledgments
12. References

1. ABSTRACT

Regulation of gene expression is one of the most intriguing aspects of Leishmania biology. This review deals with current knowledge concerning gene organization and regulation of gene expression in this protozoan parasite, which cause serious illness and death in humans living in tropical and subtropical regions. Post-transcriptional regulation is especially important for Leishmania, and other trypanosomatids, due to the unusual features related to transcription and mRNA maturation. In these organisms, genes are organized into polycistronic transcription units, whereby many genes are cotranscribed by RNA polymerase II from not well characterized, upstream promoters. These organisms represent an extreme in which the expression of their genome is almost exclusively controlled post-transcriptionally. Because the regulatory needs of these parasites are considerable as they undergo complex developmental transitions, post-transcriptional mechanisms that involve RNA and protein regulatory processes are of paramount importance for these protozoa. This review summarizes recent results on the post-transcriptional mechanisms in Leishmania that regulate protein abundance through influencing RNA splicing, nuclear-cytoplasmic mRNA stability, translation, or post-translational events such as protein stability and modification.