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Evolving Differentiation in African Trypanosomes

Juan F. Quintana, Martin Zoltner, Mark C. Field

2020Trends in Parasitology46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Differentiation is a central aspect of the parasite life cycle and encompasses adaptation to both host and environment. If we accept that evolution cannot anticipate an organism's needs as it enters a new environment, how do parasite differentiation pathways arise? The transition between vertebrate and insect stage African trypanosomes is probably one of the better studied and involves a cell-cycle arrested or 'stumpy' form that activates metabolic pathways advantageous to the parasite in the insect host. However, a range of stimuli and stress conditions can trigger similar changes, leading to formation of stumpy-like cellular states. We propose that the origin and optimisation of this differentiation program represents repurposing of a generic stress response to gain considerable gain-of-fitness associated with parasite transmission.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyOrganismAdaptation (eye)Parasite hostingRepurposingHost (biology)InsectVertebrateEvolutionary biologyCellular differentiationGenetic FitnessCell biologyEcologyGeneticsBiological evolutionGeneNeuroscienceWorld Wide WebComputer scienceTrypanosoma species research and implicationsResearch on Leishmaniasis StudiesInsect symbiosis and bacterial influences