Litcius/Paper detail

Read, Write, Adapt: Challenges and Opportunities during Kinetoplastid Genome Replication

Jeziel D. Damasceno, Catarina A. Marques, Jennifer Ann Black, Emma M. Briggs, Richard McCulloch

2020Trends in Genetics19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The genomes of all organisms are read throughout their growth and development, generating new copies during cell division and encoding the cellular activities dictated by the genome's content. However, genomes are not invariant information stores but are purposefully altered in minor and major ways, adapting cellular behaviour and driving evolution. Kinetoplastids are eukaryotic microbes that display a wide range of such read-write genome activities, in many cases affecting critical aspects of their biology, such as host adaptation. Here we discuss the range of read-write genome changes found in two well-studied kinetoplastid parasites, Trypanosoma brucei and Leishmania, focusing on recent work that suggests such adaptive genome variation is linked to novel strategies the parasites use to replicate their unconventional genomes.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyGenomeAdaptation (eye)ProkaryoteEvolutionary biologyComputational biologyGenome sizeGeneticsGeneNeuroscienceTrypanosoma species research and implicationsInsect symbiosis and bacterial influencesPlant Virus Research Studies