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      Trypanosoma cruzi: adaptation to its vectors and its hosts

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          Abstract

          American trypanosomiasis is a parasitic zoonosis that occurs throughout Latin America. The etiological agent, Trypanosoma cruzi, is able to infect almost all tissues of its mammalian hosts and spreads in the environment in multifarious transmission cycles that may or not be connected. This biological plasticity, which is probably the result of the considerable heterogeneity of the taxon, exemplifies a successful adaptation of a parasite resulting in distinct outcomes of infection and a complex epidemiological pattern. In the 1990s, most endemic countries strengthened national control programs to interrupt the transmission of this parasite to humans. However, many obstacles remain to the effective control of the disease. Current knowledge of the different components involved in elaborate system that is American trypanosomiasis (the protozoan parasite T. cruzi, vectors Triatominae and the many reservoirs of infection), as well as the interactions existing within the system, is still incomplete. The Triatominae probably evolve from predatory reduvids in response to the availability of vertebrate food source. However, the basic mechanisms of adaptation of some of them to artificial ecotopes remain poorly understood. Nevertheless, these adaptations seem to be associated with a behavioral plasticity, a reduction in the genetic repertoire and increasing developmental instability.

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          Cryptic animal species are homogeneously distributed among taxa and biogeographical regions

          Background Cryptic species are two or more distinct but morphologically similar species that were classified as a single species. During the past two decades we observed an exponential growth of publications on cryptic species. Recently published reviews have demonstrated cryptic species have profound consequences on many biological disciplines. It has been proposed that their distribution is non-random across taxa and biomes. Results We analysed a literature database for the taxonomic and biogeographical distribution of cryptic animal species reports. Results from regression analysis indicate that cryptic species are almost evenly distributed among major metazoan taxa and biogeographical regions when corrected for species richness and study intensity. Conclusion This indicates that morphological stasis represents an evolutionary constant and that cryptic metazoan diversity does predictably affect estimates of earth's animal diversity. Our findings have direct theoretical and practical consequences for a number of prevailing biological questions with regard to global biodiversity estimates, conservation efforts and global taxonomic initiatives.
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            When is it Coevolution?

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              Mechanism of genetic exchange in American trypanosomes.

              The kinetoplastid Protozoa are responsible for devastating diseases. In the Americas, Trypanosoma cruzi is the agent of Chagas' disease--a widespread disease transmissible from animals to humans (zoonosis)--which is transmitted by exposure to infected faeces of blood-sucking triatomine bugs. The presence of genetic exchange in T. cruzi and in Leishmania is much debated. Here, by producing hybrid clones, we show that T. cruzi has an extant capacity for genetic exchange. The mechanism is unusual and distinct from that proposed for the African trypanosome, Trypanosoma brucei. Two biological clones of T. cruzi were transfected to carry different drug-resistance markers, and were passaged together through the entire life cycle. Six double-drug-resistant progeny clones, recovered from the mammalian stage of the life cycle, show fusion of parental genotypes, loss of alleles, homologous recombination, and uniparental inheritance of kinetoplast maxicircle DNA. There are strong genetic parallels between these experimental hybrids and the genotypes among natural isolates of T. cruzi. In this instance, aneuploidy through nuclear hybridization results in recombination across far greater genetic distances than mendelian genetic exchange. This mechanism also parallels genome duplication.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Vet Res
                vetres
                Veterinary Research
                EDP Sciences
                0928-4249
                1297-9716
                Mar-Apr 2009
                03 March 2009
                03 March 2009
                : 40
                : 2 , Adaptative strategies of vector-borne pathogens to vectorial transmission ( publisher-idID: vetres/2009/02 )
                : 26
                Affiliations
                [1 ]simpleUR 016, Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD) , Montpellier, France
                [2 ]simpleFacultad de Medicina, Universidad Mayor San Simón , Cochabamba, Bolivia
                [3 ]simpleUnidad de Epidemiología Molecular, Instituto de Patología Experimental, Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad Nacional de Salta, Salta, Argentina, and Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET) , Argentina
                [4 ]simpleLaboratório de Biologia de Tripanosomatídeos, Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Av. Brasil 4365 , PO Box 926, Rio de Janeiro, 21040-360, RJ, Brasil
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author: francois.noireau@ 123456ird.fr
                Article
                10.1051/vetres/2009009 v09018
                10.1051/vetres/2009009
                2695024
                19250627
                acd11418-8eee-4915-bfd4-039ca4ac1ffb
                © INRA, EDP Sciences, 2009

                This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any noncommercial medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

                History
                : 16 July 2008
                : 26 February 2009
                Page count
                Figures: 9, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 123, Pages: 23
                Categories
                Review Article

                Veterinary medicine
                vectorial transmission,adaptative strategies,triatominae,mammalian host,trypanosoma cruzi

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