Article
Interspecies and Intrastrain Interplay among Leishmania spp. Parasites
Registro en:
CHAGAS, Bruna Dias das et al. Interspecies and Intrastrain Interplay among Leishmania spp. Parasites. Microorganisms, v. 10, 1883, p. 1 - 21, Sept. 2022.
2076-2607
10.3390/ microorganisms10101883
Autor
Chagas, Bruna Dias das
Pereira, Thaís Martins
Cantanhêde, Lilian Mota
Silva, Gabriela Pereira da
Boité, Mariana Côrtes
Pereira, Luiza de Oliveira Ramos
Cupollilo, Elisa
Resumen
Leishmania parasites present astonishing adaptative abilities that represent a matter of
life or death within disparate environments during the heteroxenous parasite life cycle. From an
evolutionary perspective, organisms develop methods of overcoming such challenges. Strategies that
extend beyond the genetic diversity have been discussed and include variability between parasite
cells during the infections of their hosts. The occurrence of Leishmania subpopulation fluctuations with
variable structural genomic contents demonstrates that a single strain might shelter the variability
required to overcome inconsistent environments. Such intrastrain variability provides parasites with
an extraordinary ability to adapt and thus survive and propagate. However, different perspectives on
this evolution have been proposed. Strains or species living in the same environment can cooperate
but also compete. These interactions might increase the replication rate of some parasites but cause
the loss of more aggressive competitors for others. Adaptive responses to intra- and interspecific
competition can evolve as a fixed strategy (replication is adapted to the average genetic complexity
of infections) or an optional strategy (replication varies according to the genetic complexity of the
current infection). This review highlights the complexity of interspecies and intrastrain interactions
among Leishmania parasites as well as the different factors that influence this interplay.