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Bioinformatic Identification of CRISPR-Cas Systems in Leptospira: An Update on Their Distribution Across 77 Species

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Preprints.org
DOI
10.20944/preprints202509.1116.v1

Leptospirosis is a globally distributed zoonotic disease caused by pathogenic bacteria of the Leptospira genus. Genome editing in Leptospira has been difficult to perform. Currently, the functionality of the CRISPR-Cas system has been demonstrated in species such as Leptospira interrogans. However, the different CRISPR-Cas systems present in most of the 77 species are unknown. Therefore, the objective of this study was to identify the CRISPR-Cas systems present in the genomes of the Leptospira genus using bioinformatics tools. Methods: bioinformatics workflow was followed: the genomes were downloaded from the NCBI database, Cas proteins detection was carried out using the CRISPR-CasFinder and RAST web servers, functional analysis of Cas proteins (InterProScan, ProtParam, Swiss Model, Alphafold3, Swiss PDB Viewer, and Pymol), conservation pattern detection (MEGA12, and Seqlogos), spacer identification (Actinobacteriophages db and BLAST), and bacteriophage detection (Phaster, and Phastest). Results: Cas proteins were detected in 36/77 species of the Leptospira genus, these proteins were (Cas1-Cas9, and Cas12). The proteins were classified into class 1 and class 2 systems, and types I, II, and V. Direct repeats and spacers were detected in 19 species. The direct repeats presented two nucleotide conservation motifs. With the spacer sequences, 270 different bacteriophages were identified. Three intact bacteriophages were detected in the genome of four Leptospira species. Two saprophytic species have complete CRISPR-Cas systems. Conclusions: The presence of Cas proteins, direct repeats, and spacer sequences homologous to bacteriophage genomes suggests a functional CRISPR-Cas system in at least 19 species.

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