| Literature DB >> 25529755 |
Gareth D Weedall1, Neil Hall1.
Abstract
A key part of the life cycle of an organism is reproduction. For a number of important protist parasites that cause human and animal disease, their sexuality has been a topic of debate for many years. Traditionally, protists were considered to be primitive relatives of the 'higher' eukaryotes, which may have diverged prior to the evolution of sex and to reproduce by binary fission. More recent views of eukaryotic evolution suggest that sex, and meiosis, evolved early, possibly in the common ancestor of all eukaryotes. However, detecting sex in these parasites is not straightforward. Recent advances, particularly in genome sequencing technology, have allowed new insights into parasite reproduction. Here, we review the evidence on reproduction in parasitic protists. We discuss protist reproduction in the light of parasitic life cycles and routes of transmission among hosts.Entities:
Keywords: meiosis
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25529755 PMCID: PMC4413856 DOI: 10.1017/S0031182014001693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasitology ISSN: 0031-1820 Impact factor: 3.234
Fig. 1.Simplified schematic representations of the life cycles of vector- and fecal–oral-transmitted parasites. (A) The Plasmodium falciparum life cycle, which has two cycles of asexual growth, one in each host, and the sexual stages (grey shading) which span transmission from one host to another; (B) the T. brucei life cycle, in which the sexual stages appear to take place in the insect host, after a cycle of asexual cell divisions but before transmission to the mammalian host; (C) the Cryptosporidium and Eimeria life cycle, in which the sexual stages all take place within the single host and cysts are passed into the environment.
Genes of the ‘meiosis detection toolkit’ and evidence of their presence in parasitic protozoal lineages. (Adapted from Malik et al. 2007 and Schurko and Logsdon, 2008)
| Genes (paralogue) | Protein function | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Required to create DNA double-strand breaks (essential to initiate meiotic recombination among homologous chromosomes). | + | + | + | + (2x) | + | + (2x) | |
| Synaptonemal complex protein with an important role in chromosome pairing during meiosis. Binds to double strand break regions and oligomerizes during meiotic prophase I. | + | + | + | + | + | − | |
| Form heterodimeric complex that interacts with RAD51 and DMC1 and promotes inter-homologue meiotic recombination and reduces synapsis and recombination of non-homologous chromosomes. | + (2x), + | +, + | +, + | +, + | +, + | +, + | |
| Holds sister chromatids together during meiosis (by linking SMC1 and SMC3 subunits). Remains bound until the onset of anaphase II. | − | − | − | − | − | − | |
| DMC1 and RAD51 co-localize during meiosis and cooperate during meiotic recombination. RAD51 is required for mitotic recombination, DNA damage repair, and in meiosis. DMC1 is meiosis-specific and essential for meiotic recombination and normal synaptonemal complex formation. | + | + (2x) | + | + | + | + (2x) | |
| MSH4 and MSH5 form a heterodimer and have roles in meiotic recombination and Holliday junction resolution. | +, + | −, − | +, + | −, − | −, − | +, + | |
| Meiosis-specific DEAD-box helicase. Promotes Holliday junction resolution together with proteins including MSH4 and MSH5. | + | + | + | − | − | − |