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Dive into the research topics where Lena Åslund is active.

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Featured researches published by Lena Åslund.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1998

The Trypanosoma cruzi Mucin Family Is Transcribed from Hundreds of Genes Having Hypervariable Regions

Javier M. Di Noia; Iván D'Orso; Lena Åslund; Daniel O. Sánchez; Alberto C.C. Frasch

In previous works we have identified genes in the protozoan parasite Trypanosoma cruzi whose structure resemble those of mammalian mucin genes. Indirect evidence suggested that these genes might encode the core protein of parasite mucins, glycoproteins that were proposed to be involved in the interaction with, and invasion of, mammalian host cells. We now show that the mucin gene family from T. cruzi is much larger and diverse than expected. A minimal number of 484 mucin genes per haploid genome is calculated for a parasite clone. Most, if not all, genes are transcribed, as deduced from cDNA analysis. Comparison of the cDNA sequences showed evidences of a high mutation rate in localized regions of the genes. Sequence conservation among members of the family is much higher in the untranslated (UTR) regions than in the sequences encoding the mature mucin core protein. Transcription units can be classified into two main subfamilies according to the sequence homologies in the 5′-UTR, whereas the 3′-UTR is highly conserved in all clones analyzed. The common origin of members of this gene family as well as their relationships can be defined by sequence comparison of different domains in the transcription units. The regions encoding the N and C termini, supposed to correspond to the leader peptide and membrane-anchoring signal, respectively, (Di Noia, J. M., Sánchez, D. O., and Frasch, A. C. C. (1995)J. Biol. Chem. 270, 24146–24149) are highly conserved. Conversely, the central regions are highly variable. These regions encode the target sites for O-glycosylation and are made of a variable number of repetitive units rich in Thr and Pro residues or are nonrepetitive but still rich in Thr/Ser and Pro residues. The region putatively coding for the N-terminal domain of the mature core protein is hypervariable, being different in most of the transcripts sequenced. Nonrepetitive central domains are unique to each gene. Gene-specific probes show that the relative abundance of different mRNAs varies greatly within the same parasite clone.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 2008

Histone Acetylation and Methylation at Sites Initiating Divergent Polycistronic Transcription in Trypanosoma cruzi

Patricia Respuela; Marcela Ferella; Alvaro Rada-Iglesias; Lena Åslund

Trypanosomes are ancient eukaryotic parasites in which the protein-coding genes, organized in large polycistronic clusters on both strands, are transcribed from as yet unidentified promoters. In an effort to reveal transcriptional initiation sites, we examined the Trypanosoma cruzi genome for histone modification patterns shown to be linked to active genes in various organisms. Here, we show that acetylated and methylated histones were found to be enriched at strand switch regions of divergent gene arrays, not at convergent clusters or intra- and intergenic regions within clusters. The modified region showed a bimodular profile with two peaks centered over the 5′-regions of the gene pair flanking the strand switch region. This pattern, which demarcates polycistronic transcription units originating from bidirectional initiation sites, is likely to be common in kinetoplastid parasites as well as in other organisms with polycistronic transcription. In contrast, no acetylation was found at promoters of the highly expressed rRNA and spliced leader genes or satellite DNA or at tested retrotransposonal elements. These results reveal, for the first time, the presence of specific epigenetic marks in T. cruzi with potential implications for transcriptional regulation; they indicate that both histone modifications and bidirectional transcription are evolutionarily conserved.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1990

Chromosomal localization of seven cloned antigen genes provides evidence of diploidy and further demonstration of karyotype variability in Trypanosoma cruzi

Jan Henriksson; Lena Åslund; Roberto A. Macina; Berta M. Franke de Cazzulo; Juan José Cazzulo; Alberto C.C. Frasch; Ulf Pettersson

The karyotype of Trypanosoma cruzi was studied by pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) in conditions that allowed 20-25 chromosome bands to be detected. However, several of these bands were present in non-equimolar amounts, suggesting that the total chromosome number is considerably higher. The patterns obtained with the different cloned and uncloned strains were unique, suggesting that the karyotype of T. cruzi is highly variable. The chromosomal localizations of seven cloned genes were determined by Southern blotting of PFGE-separated chromosomes. Three of the clones gave rise to similar patterns and mapped on a chromosome or a family of chromosomes larger than 1.6 Mb. Two clones mapped on either single or pairs of chromosomes, which in some cases differed considerably in size between the different strains tested, suggesting that extensive chromosome rearrangements occur in T. cruzi. Another clone hybridized to several chromosomes in most strains and probably represents a family of genes. Lastly, one clone hybridized to nearly all chromosomes. Many of the clones hybridized to pairs of restriction fragments in the different strains, suggesting that they are allelic. For one of the clones it was possible to provide further evidence for the allelic nature of the fragments by establishing detailed restriction maps around them and by showing that the two fragments in a pair hybridized to chromosomes which differed slightly in size. Taken together, the results infer that the genome of T. cruzi epimastigotes is diploid.


Parasitology Today | 1996

Karyotype variability in Trypanosoma cruzi

Jan Henriksson; Lena Åslund; Ulf Pettersson

Like many other protozoam parasites, Trypanosoma cruzi (the causative agent of Chagas disease) has a plastic genome. Chromosome size polymorphisms occur in different strains of T. cruzi as well as among clones originating from the same strain, Despite this polymorphism, major interchromosomal rearrangements appear to be rare since several linkage groups of chromosomal markers are well conserved among different T. cruzi strains. In addition, some correlation has been found between karyotype variability and classification by multilocus enzyme electrophoresis. In this review, Jan Henriksson, Lena Aslund and Ulf Petterson discuss the genomic variability and suggest that amplication of repetitive sequences or members of gene families make a major contribution to the chromosomal size variation


Parasitology Today | 1991

Comparison of genes encoding Trypanosoma cruzi antigens

Alberto C.C. Frasch; Juan José Cazzulo; Lena Åslund; Ulf Pettersson

Trypanosoma cruzi, the causative agent of Chagas disease, simultaneously expresses several different surface antigens. This contrasts sharply with blood-stream forms o f the African trypanosomes, which display only one variant surface glycoprotein at a time. Over the past few years, the genes coding for a number of T. cruzi proteins recognized by sera from patients have been cloned and at least partially sequenced. However, some of those discovered in more than one laboratory have been given different names. Here, Carlos Frasch, Juan Cazzulo, Lena Aslund and UIf Pettersson try to systematize the literature available on these antigens, including what is known about their localization and function.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 1994

A gene family encoding heterogeneous histone H1 proteins in Trypanosoma cruzi.

Lena Åslund; Lars Carlsson; Jan Henriksson; Maria Rydåker; G. Cecilia Toro; Norbel Galanti; Ulf Pettersson

A gene family encoding a set of histone H1 proteins in Trypanosoma cruzi is described. The sequence of 3 genomic and 4 cDNA clones revealed the presence of several motifs characteristic of histone H1, although heterogeneity at the polypeptide level was evident. The clones encode histone H1 proteins of an unusually small size (74-97 amino acids), which lack the globular domain found in histone H1 of higher eukaryotes. All histone H1 mRNAs from T. cruzi are polyadenylated, although no typical polyadenylation signal was found. Furthermore, the genes encoding the histone H1 proteins in T. cruzi are found in a tandem array containing 15-20 gene copies per haploid genome. This tandem array is located on a large chromosome of 2.2 Mb.


Journal of Molecular Biology | 1985

Highly reiterated non-coding sequence in the genome of Plasmodium falciparum is composed of 21 base-pair tandem repeats

Lena Åslund; Lena Franzén; Gunnar Westin; Torgny Persson; Hans Wigzell; Ulf Pettersson

Clones containing highly reiterated DNA sequences were isolated from a Plasmodium falciparum genomic library. One clone, Rep2, was selected for further characterization by nucleotide sequence analysis. The results revealed that the insert of this clone is composed of tandemly arranged 21 base-pair imperfect repeats. These repeats are estimated to comprise approximately 1% of the P. falciparum genome and there are 10(4) to 2 X 10(5) copies, depending on the genome size estimate used for calculation. Moreover, the repeats are organized in clusters and do not appear to be transcribed in non-synchronized P. falciparum cultures.


Molecular and Biochemical Parasitology | 2003

Characterization of a lysosomal serine carboxypeptidase from Trypanosoma cruzi

Fabiola Parussini; Mayra Garcı́a; Juan Mucci; Fernán Agüero; Daniel O. Sánchez; Ulf Hellman; Lena Åslund; Juan José Cazzulo

Trypanosoma cruzi, the flagellate protozoan which is the causative agent of the American trypanosomiasis, Chagas disease has carboxypeptidase activity. The enzyme has been purified to protein homogeneity, and shown to be a lysosomal monomeric glycoprotein with a molecular mass of about 54kDa. The enzyme has an optimum acidic pH (4.5 with furyl acryloyl-Phe-Phe as substrate), is highly specific for hydrophobic C-terminal amino acid residues, and is strongly inhibited by 3,4-dichloroisocoumarin (IC(50) value 0.3 microM). The enzyme is encoded by a number of genes arrayed in head-to-tail tandems; one of these genes has been cloned and sequenced. Sequence comparisons indicate that the enzyme belongs to the C group of serine carboxypeptidases, within the S10 serine peptidase family, and shows the higher similarity to plant and yeast enzymes. The residues involved in catalysis and most of those involved in substrate binding are conserved in the T. cruzi enzyme as well as 8 out of 10 Cys residues known to be involved in disulfide bridges in the yeast enzyme. This is the first report of an S10 family enzyme in trypanosomatids. The presence of serine carboxypeptidases is not restricted to T. cruzi, being possibly a general character of trypanosomatids.


Parasitology Today | 1997

The Trypanosoma cruzi genome initiative

Bianca Zingales; Edson Rondinelli; Wim Degrave; José Franco da Silveira; Mariano J. Levin; Denis Le Paslier; Farrokh Modabber; Boris Dobrokhotov; John Swindle; John M. Kelly; Lena Åslund; Jörg D. Hoheisel; Andrés M. Ruiz; Juan José Cazzulo; Ulf Pettersson; Alberto C.C. Frasch

An initiative was launched in 1994 by the Special Programme for Research and Training in Tropical Diseases (TDR) of the WHO to analyse the genomes of the parasites Filaria, Schistosoma, Leishmania, Trypanosoma brucei and Trypanosoma cruzi. Five networks were established through wide publicity, holding meetings of key laboratories and developing proposals which were then reviewed by the Steering Committee of Strategic Research for financial support. The aim of the Programme was to use the platform of these networks to: (1) train scientists from tropical disease-endemic countries; (2) transfer technology and share material and expertise, thereby reducing costs and increasing efficiency; and (3) provide an information system that is accessible globally as soon as the results become available. The initial target was to produce a low-resolution genome map for each of the parasites, but it soon became evident that by using rapidly developing technologies, it might be feasible to complete DNA-sequence analysis for some of the parasites in the next decade, as discussed here by Alberto Carlos Frasch and colleagues, with particular focus on the T. cruzi genome initiative.


Vaccine | 1991

High antibody responses in rabbits immunized with influenza virus ISCOMs containing a repeated sequence of the Plasmodium falciparum antigen Pf155/RESA.

Anders Sjölander; Karin Lövgren; Stefan Ståhl; Lena Åslund; Marianne Hansson; Per-Åke Nygren; Margareta Larsson; Margareta Hagstedt; Birgitta Wåhlin; Klavs Berzins; Mathias Uhlén; Bror Morein; Peter Perlmann

Immunostimulating complexes (ISCOMs) are spherical structures where immunogens are presented as multimers in a matrix of the adjuvant Quil A. ISCOMs have been shown to enhance the immunogenicity of several antigens important to both human and veterinary vaccine development. We have coupled a fusion protein, designated ZZ-M2, comprising eight copies of the C-terminal repeat subunit EENV of the Plasmodium falciparum blood-stage antigen Pf155/RESA and two IgG-binding domains of staphylococcal protein A (SpA), to preformed influenza virus envelope protein ISCOMs. Rabbits immunized with the conjugated ISCOMs produced high titres of antibodies even after the first injection. These antibodies reacted with the EENV repeat sequence in ELISA and with Pf155/RESA in immunofluorescence on infected erythrocytes. The antibody response, which was sustained for more than 20 weeks, was efficiently boosted and superior or equal to that obtained after immunization with ZZ-M2 in Freunds complete adjuvant. In contrast, the antibody response induced in rabbits immunized with ZZ-M2 in Syntex Adjuvant Formulation-MF (SAF-MF) was weak and of short duration. The antibodies produced after immunization with ZZ-M2 coupled to influenza virus ISCOMs mainly recognized epitopes formed by two or more EENV subunits and were highly specific for Pf155/RESA. Furthermore, the antibodies efficiently inhibited merozoite reinvasion of erythrocytes in vitro, indicating that they recognized epitopes exposed on the native antigen. In addition, the ZZ-M2-conjugated ISCOMs also induced high titres of antibodies reacting with SpA or the influenza virus envelope protein.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Alberto C.C. Frasch

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Juan José Cazzulo

National Scientific and Technical Research Council

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Andrés M. Ruiz

University of Buenos Aires

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