Posted on 06/13/2019 5:16:52 PM PDT by ETL
Even single-celled organisms desire partners every now and then.
Leishmaniasingle-celled parasites that cause infections of the skin and internal organshave long been known to multiply asexually, like bacteria. But occasionally, researchers have found hybrid parasites that carry genetic material from more than one strainor even more than one speciesof Leishmania, suggesting that some kind of genetic mixing is going on.
Now, researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the National Institutes of Health (NIH) have found that the hybrid Leishmania parasites can mate with one another to produce fertile offspring that carry genes from both parentssigns of a true sexual reproductive cycle. The researchers hope to use their genetic remixing as a tool to find genes involved in virulence in Leishmanial disease.
"What we want to know is why one strain causes a mild form of disease and another causes a lethal form, or how the parasites evade the immune response," said co-senior author Stephen Beverley, Ph.D., a professor of molecular microbiology at the School of Medicine. "By generating offspring with different characteristics, we can identify the genes that cause severe disease or immune resistance. That could be a step toward better treatment or prevention."
The findings are available online in PLOS Genetics.
-snip-
By studying the hybrid parasites and their recombined progeny, the researchers will be able to map the location on chromosomes of genes involved in causing disease and resisting the immune response. Such a genetic map will aid efforts to understand why some strains cause worse disease than others, and how to bolster the immune response to the parasites.
"The good news is we generated offspring with new genetic combinations, which are perfect for our purposes," Beverley said.
"The less good news is we could only obtain a handful, which were enough to establish their fertility, but not quite enough to make a high-resolution map of virulence genes."
The researchers are now trying to figure out why hybrid parasites so rarely succeed at mating.
"If you're a microbe and you have a winning genetic combination that allows you to thrive, you're going to reproduce asexually most of the time, because why mess with a good thing?" Beverley said.
"But even so, you might want to mix things up a bit from time to time, just to see if a new genetic combination can be even more successful. So microbes have mechanisms in place to reshuffle their genetic material via sexual reproduction, but also mechanisms to prevent too much reshuffling so that they can maintain winning genetic combinations and limit inbreeding.
If we can find out what it is that is limiting mating of our experimental hybrid parasites, we will likely uncover something new about the biology of reproduction.
Even better, we may be able to twist it to our own purposes and learn how to create super-fertile hybrid parasites. And then we can use them to find out what we need to know about how they cause disease."
Gee this is too easy. The jokes write themselves.
Dirty little buggers!
O, for Heaven’s sakes. You mean the science on the sex life of single cell parasites isn’t even settled?
How is the phrase “once thought to be asexual” different from “it was settled science” ?
One is the way a scientist phrases things the other is the way a propagandist phrases things.
Single celled parasites?? Look no further than democrats. They reproduce SOMEHOW
I thought Mitt Romney was a robot, but he’s apparently got quite a brood.
I misread the title. I thought it said single brain cell parasites. Thought the article was about one of my daughters ex boyfriends.
Vee hat fun creatink mawnsters, bwahahaha!
“The first time
ever I saw your Mitochondria
I thought the Sun, rose in your Nuclei!”
Apparently, the only science that IS case-closed, no-doubt-in-the-world-about-it, settled, is man-made Gore-Bull warming.
Pretty song (the original one).
Oh my, that’s a disturbing image!
With who does the first sexual replicator mate?
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