About: Apicomplexa is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 298 publications have been published within this topic receiving 19963 citations. The topic is also known as: sporozoan & sporozoa.
TL;DR: The malaria parasite is the most important member of the Apicomplexa, a large and highly successful phylum of intracellular parasites that incorporates unique features and utilize a specific set of ligand-receptor interactions.
TL;DR: Genome analysis identifies extremely streamlined metabolic pathways and a reliance on the host for nutrients in the parasite, which lacks an apicoplast and its genome, and possesses a degenerate mitochondrion that has lost its genome.
Abstract: The apicomplexan Cryptosporidium parvum is an intestinal parasite that affects healthy humans and animals, and causes an unrelenting infection in immunocompromised individuals such as AIDS patients. We report the complete genome sequence of C. parvum, type II isolate. Genome analysis identifies extremely streamlined metabolic pathways and a reliance on the host for nutrients. In contrast to Plasmodium and Toxoplasma, the parasite lacks an apicoplast and its genome, and possesses a degenerate mitochondrion that has lost its genome. Several novel classes of cell-surface and secreted proteins with a potential role in host interactions and pathogenesis were also detected. Elucidation of the core metabolism, including enzymes with high similarities to bacterial and plant counterparts, opens new avenues for drug development.
TL;DR: Observations indicate that the Apicomplexa acquired a plastid by secondary endosymbiosis, probably from a green alga.
Abstract: Protozoan parasites of the phylum Apicomplexa contain three genetic elements: the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes characteristic of virtually all eukaryotic cells and a 35-kilobase circular extrachromosomal DNA. In situ hybridization techniques were used to localize the 35-kilobase DNA of Toxoplasma gondii to a discrete organelle surrounded by four membranes. Phylogenetic analysis of the tufA gene encoded by the 35-kilobase genomes of coccidians T. gondii and Eimeria tenella and the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum grouped this organellar genome with cyanobacteria and plastids, showing consistent clustering with green algal plastids. Taken together, these observations indicate that the Apicomplexa acquired a plastid by secondary endosymbiosis, probably from a green alga.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that by gene targeting in a rodent Plasmodium, TRAP is critical for sporozoite infection of the mosquito salivary glands and the rat liver, and is essential for sporzoite gliding motility in vitro, suggesting that in PlasModium sporozoites, and likely in other Apicomplexa, gliding locomotion and cell invasion have a common molecular basis.
TL;DR: This work uses genetic crosses between type II and III lines to show that strain-specific differences in the modulation of host cell transcription are mediated by a putative protein kinase, ROP16, and provides a new mechanism for how an intracellular eukaryotic pathogen can interact with its host.
Abstract: Toxoplasma gondii, an obligate intracellular parasite of the phylum Apicomplexa, can cause severe disease in humans with an immature or suppressed immune system. The outcome of Toxoplasma infection is highly dependent on the strain type, as are many of its in vitro growth properties1. Here we use genetic crosses between type II and III lines to show that strain-specific differences in the modulation of host cell transcription are mediated by a putative protein kinase, ROP16. Upon invasion by the parasite, this polymorphic protein is released from the apical organelles known as rhoptries and injected into the host cell, where it ultimately affects the activation of signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) signalling pathways and consequent downstream effects on a key host cytokine, interleukin (IL)-12. Our findings provide a new mechanism for how an intracellular eukaryotic pathogen can interact with its host and reveal important differences in how different Toxoplasma lineages have evolved to exploit this interaction.