Trypanosoma Brucei is a notable parasitic species of Trypanosoma. The species causes African trypanosomaiasis (or sleeping sickness) in humans and animals in Africa. There are 3 sub-species of T.brucei; T.b.brucei, T.b.gambiense and T.b.rhodesiense.
The entirely parisitic species has two hosts - its insect vector and mammalian host. Because of the large difference between these hosts the cell undergoes complex changes to facilitate its survival in the insect gut and the mammalian bloodstream. It also features a unique and notable variable surface glycoprotein (VSG) coat in order to avoid the host's immune system. There is an urgent need for the development of new drug therapies as current treatments can prove fatal to the patient as well as the trypanosomes.
The trypanosome cytoskeleton is the subject of considerable research. The cytoskeleton, as the structure behind mitosis, locomotion and surface binding, is vital for viability and so is a target of interest for drug development.
The insect vector for T.brucei is the tsetse fly. The parasite lives in the gut of the fly (procyclic form), until it migrates to the salivary glands for injection to the mammalian host on binding. The parasite lives within the bloodstream (bloodstream form) where it can reinfect the fly vector after biting. Later during a T.brucei infection the parisite may migrate to other areas of the host. A T.brucei infection may be transfered human to human via bodily fluid exchange, primarily blood transfer.
There are three different sub-species of T.brucei cause different variants of Trypanosomaiasis.
Trypanosomatids show specific cellular forms:
T.brucei can be found in any of these forms, with the typical procyclic and bloodstream forms in the trypomastigote structure.
The mitochondrial genome is found condensed into the kinetoplast, an unusual feature unique to the the kinetoplastea class. It and the basal body of the flagellum are strongly associated via a cytoskeletal structure.
The coat is highly variable - there are thought to be many hundred alternative copies of the gene in the genome. In each cell, and throughout a population of cells within the host, the same coat protein is expressed, but this expression is unstable and is likely to change with the next generation. Rates of switching of up to 1 in 50 cells per generation have been seen.
The protein is made up of a highly variable N terminal domain of around 300 to 350 amino acids, and a more conserved C terminal domain of around 100 amino acids. The c terminal domain forms a structural bundle of 4 alpha helixes, while the N teminal domain forms a 'halo' around the helixes. The tertiary stucture of this halo is well conserved (supprisingly, given that the actual amino acid sequences varys very widely), allowing close packing into the physical barrier the VSGs are required to form. The VSGs are anchored to the cell membrane via a GPI anchor - a covelant linkage from the c terminus, through around 4 sugars, to a phosphatidyl-inositol phospholipid acid which lies in the cell membrane.
The genome contains many copies of possible VSG genes. Around 20 are found on the large and intermediate chromosomes which are active and potentially transcribed (although only one per cell ever will be). Around 100 are found near the telomeres of the mini chromosomes. These are not active, but if moved via recombination to an active transcription site will produce a functional VSG protein. Finally around 1000 are found in repeated sections in the interior of the chromosomes. These are generally inactive, typically with ommitted sections or premature stop codons, but are important in the evolution of new VSG genes. It is estimated up to 10% of the T.brucei genome may be made up of VSG genes or pseudogenes.
Upon infection the trypanosome originally expresses a particular VSG. As the host's immune system generates a specific response to this coat protein this selects against expression of that VSG, lowering the population of trypanosomes. At this point a cell will start expressing an alternative VSG, and can repopulate. The overall effect of this boom and bust population cycle due to the predator/prey relationship with the hosts immune system leads to a succession of bouts of infection, each with a different VSG coat protein being expressed.
Microfillament and intermediate fillaments also play an important role in the cytoskeleton, but these generally overlooked.
The microtubules of the flagellar axoneme lie in the normal 9+2 arrangement, orientated with the + at the anterior end and the - in the basal body. The a cytoskeletal structure extends from the basal body to the kinetoplast. The flagellum is bound to the cytoskeleton of the main cell body by four specialised microtubules, which run parallel and in the same direction to the flagellar tubulin.
The flagellar function is twofold - locomotion via oscilations along the attatched flagellum and cell body, and attatchment to the fly gut during the procyclic phase.
Stages of mitosis:
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"Trypanosoma brucei".
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