| Literature DB >> 31269710 |
Cheryl A Lobo1, Jeny R Cursino-Santos2, Manpreet Singh2, Marilis Rodriguez2.
Abstract
Babesia divergens is an obligate intracellular protozoan parasite that causes zoonotic disease. Central to its pathogenesis is the ability of the parasite to invade host red blood cells of diverse species, and, once in the host blood stream, to manipulate the composition of its population to allow it to endure unfavorable conditions. Here we will review key in vitro studies relating to the survival strategies that B. divergens adopts during its intraerythrocytic development to persist and how proliferation is restored in the parasite population once optimum conditions return.Entities:
Keywords: Babesia; invasion; malaria; persistence; population structure
Year: 2019 PMID: 31269710 PMCID: PMC6789513 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens8030095
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Figure 1Persistence Model based on in vitro system. (A,B) Animals and humans get infected by the bites of infected ticks. (C) Babesiosis is also transmitted by blood transfusion. The storage of blood bags at low temperature reduces the size of Bd population. However, once under optimal condition of in vitro culture, Bd is capable of rebuilding its population from few parasites. (D,F) Biological processes that the parasite can control to promote persistence. (D) Control of invasion (E) From the top to the bottom, a complex population structure is built to gain heterogeneity which guarantee the provision of both the number of parasites and parasite stages, for prompt parasite response to environmental changes. Infected RBCs highlighted in yellow represent the diversity of stages and different parasite loads that can stay as the previous stage or keep proliferating within the same host cell to increase the reservoir of infecting individuals. (F) Parasite persistence is controlled by choice of host cells to be lysed and the number of parasites released during egress.
Figure 2Persistence of parasite infection is dependent on the dynamics of parasite population. The heterogenous structure of the parasite population is a strategy exploited by the parasite for survival. Four main populations of infected red blood cells (RBCs( (1N-, 2N; 4N-and > 4N-iRBCs) vary in frequency based on the population needs. Under population expansion, >4N-RBC are less frequent since there is no need for the storage of infective merozoites. Under adverse conditions, multiple parasites are arrested within the host cells until the environmental condition is restored.