Interaction between transforming <i>Theileria</i> parasites and their host bovine leukocytes
Shahin Tajeri, Malak Haidar, Takaya Sakura, Gordon Langsley
Abstract
Theileria are tick-transmitted parasites that cause often fatal leuko-proliferative diseases in cattle called tropical theileriosis (T. annulata) and East Coast fever (T. parva). However, upon treatment with anti-theilerial drug-transformed leukocytes die of apoptosis indicating that Theileria-induced transformation is reversible making infected leukocytes a powerful example of how intracellular parasites interact with their hosts. Theileria-transformed leukocytes disseminate throughout infected cattle causing a cancer-like disease and here, we discuss how cytokines, noncoding RNAs and oncometabolites can contribute to the transformed phenotype and disease pathology.
Topics & Concepts
BiologyTheileriaTheileria parvaVirologyHost (biology)DiseaseImmunologyEast Coast feverPhenotypeGeneParasite hostingGeneticsWorld Wide WebPathologyComputer scienceMedicineVector-borne infectious diseasesVector-Borne Animal DiseasesViral Infections and Vectors