How colonization bottlenecks, tissue niches, and transmission strategies shape protozoan infections
Stochastic bottlenecks encountered during infection can have a disproportionately large influence on successful parasite colonization.The relationship between parasite infection of discrete tissue niches and long-term persistence or transmission is not fully understood.Cellular barcoding combined wi...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Trends in parasitology 2023-12, Vol.39 (12), p.1074-1086 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Stochastic bottlenecks encountered during infection can have a disproportionately large influence on successful parasite colonization.The relationship between parasite infection of discrete tissue niches and long-term persistence or transmission is not fully understood.Cellular barcoding combined with spatial proteomics and transcriptomics has the potential to connect gene expression phenotypes with infection outcomes during colonization.
Protozoan pathogens such as Plasmodium spp., Leishmania spp., Toxoplasma gondii, and Trypanosoma spp. are often associated with high-mortality, acute and chronic diseases of global health concern. For transmission and immune evasion, protozoans have evolved diverse strategies to interact with a range of host tissue environments. These interactions are linked to disease pathology, yet our understanding of the association between parasite colonization and host homeostatic disruption is limited. Recently developed techniques for cellular barcoding have the potential to uncover the biology regulating parasite transmission, dissemination, and the stability of infection. Understanding bottlenecks to infection and the in vivo tissue niches that facilitate chronic infection and spread has the potential to reveal new aspects of parasite biology.
Protozoan pathogens such as Plasmodium spp., Leishmania spp., Toxoplasma gondii, and Trypanosoma spp. are often associated with high-mortality, acute and chronic diseases of global health concern. For transmission and immune evasion, protozoans have evolved diverse strategies to interact with a range of host tissue environments. These interactions are linked to disease pathology, yet our understanding of the association between parasite colonization and host homeostatic disruption is limited. Recently developed techniques for cellular barcoding have the potential to uncover the biology regulating parasite transmission, dissemination, and the stability of infection. Understanding bottlenecks to infection and the in vivo tissue niches that facilitate chronic infection and spread has the potential to reveal new aspects of parasite biology. |
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ISSN: | 1471-4922 1471-5007 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.pt.2023.09.017 |