4.5 Review

A framework for signaling throughout the life cycle of Babesia species

Journal

MOLECULAR MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 115, Issue 5, Pages 882-890

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/mmi.14650

Keywords

Apicomplexa; Babesia; calcium signaling; signal transduction

Funding

  1. NIH [1R21AI153945]

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Babesia species are tick-borne parasites that infect mammalian red blood cells, causing severe diseases. They have complex life cycles involving multiple stages in both ticks and mammalian hosts, utilizing intricate signaling pathways for replication, egress, and invasion. Understanding the signaling pathways and environmental stimuli used by Babesia species during transmission is crucial for further biological and translational studies of these parasites.
Babesia species are tick-borne intracellular parasites that infect the red blood cells of their mammalian host, leading to severe or fatal disease. Babesia spp. infect a wide range of mammalian species and cause a significant economic burden globally, predominantly through disease in cattle. Several Babesia spp. are increasingly being recognized as zoonotic pathogens of humans. Babesia spp. have complex life cycles involving multiple stages in the tick and the mammalian host. The parasite utilizes complex signaling pathways during replication, egress, and invasion in each of these stages. They must also rapidly respond to their environment when switching between the mammalian and tick stages. This review will focus on the signaling pathways and environmental stimuli that Babesia spp. utilize in the bloodstream and for transmission to the tick, with an emphasis on the role of phosphorylation- and calcium-based signaling during egress and invasion. The expanding availability of in vitro and in vivo culture systems, genomes, transcriptomes, and transgenic systems available for a range of Babesia spp. should encourage further biological and translational studies of these ubiquitous parasites.

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