4.8 Article

Multiple Independent Origins of Apicomplexan-Like Parasites

期刊

CURRENT BIOLOGY
卷 29, 期 17, 页码 2936-+

出版社

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2019.07.019

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资金

  1. Canadian Institutes for Health Research [MOP-42517]
  2. Tula Foundation
  3. ERD fund Centre for Research of Pathogenicity and Virulence of Parasites'' [CZ. 02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000759]
  4. Fellowship Purkyne, Czech Acad. Sci
  5. NSERC Canadian Graduate Scholarship
  6. HIR grant [UMC/625/1/HIR/027]
  7. Czech Acad

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The apicomplexans are a group of obligate animal pathogens that include Plasmodium (malaria), Toxoplasma (toxoplasmosis), and Cryptosporidium (cryptosporidiosis) [1]. They are an extremely diverse and specious group but are nevertheless united by a distinctive suite of cytoskeletal and secretory structures related to infection, called the apical complex, which is used to recognize and gain entry into animal host cells. The apicomplexans are also known to have evolved from free-living photosynthetic ancestors and retain a relict plastid (the apicoplast), which is non-photosynthetic but houses a number of other essential metabolic pathways [2]. Their closest relatives include a mix of both photosynthetic algae (chromerids) and non-photosynthetic microbial predators (colpodellids) [3]. Genomic analyses of these free-living relatives have revealed a great deal about how the alga-parasite transition may have taken place, as well as origins of parasitism more generally [4]. Here, we show that, despite the surprisingly complex origin of apicomplexans from algae, this transition actually occurred at least three times independently. Using single-cell genomics and transcriptomics from diverse uncultivated parasites, we find that two genera previously classified within the Apicomplexa, Piridium and Platyproteum, form separately branching lineages in phylogenomic analyses. Both retain cryptic plastids with genomic and metabolic features convergent with apicomplexans. These findings suggest a predilection in this lineage for both the convergent loss of photosynthesis and transition to parasitism, resulting in multiple lineages of superficially similar animal parasites.

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