Trypanosoma gambiense
and T. rhodesiense (African trypanosomiasis)
Life
cycle of African (sleeping sickness) species:

From the July 18, 2005 issue of SciAm.com:
Analysis
Identifies Common Genetic Core for Trio of Parasites:
Scientists have successfully sequenced
the genomes of three deadly parasites that together threaten half a billion
people annually around the globe. According to reports published in the current
issue of the journal Science, the parasites responsible for African
sleeping sickness, Chagas disease and leishmaniasis--illnesses with very different
symptoms--share a core of a few thousand genes. Scientists hope that the
results will prove useful for identifying novel drug or vaccine targets.
The
three parasites, which are passed on to humans through very different vectors,
are from the family Trypanosomatidae and look similar
under a microscope. In addition, the new genetic analyses identified 6,200 core
genes that the so-called TriTryps share, which
represent about 70 percent of their total DNA. But the international research
teams also identified important ways in which they differ and discovered that
the genes unique to each organism are mostly located near the ends of
chromosomes. "Thanks to these studies, scientists are now much closer than
they were five years ago to developing effective drugs against these terrible
diseases, " remarks Najib
El-Sayed of the Institute for Genomic Research in
The
results indicate that T. brucei, which causes
sleeping sickness, has the least overall metabolic capacity, whereas Leishmania major has the greatest. The Chagas disease parasite T. cruzi,
meanwhile, has some 1,300 genes that may help it better evade a host's immune
system. "Now that the genes of parasites are mapped out, it's much easier
to identify genes that are critical for parasite survival," explains
co-author Peter J. Myler of the Seattle Biomedical
Research Institute. "Genes encoding proteins that are involved in critical
biological processes often serve as drug targets."
Images: http://www.k-state.edu/parasitology/625tutorials/Protozoa06.html
Phylogeny: Order Kinetoplastida
Preferred
definitive host: Humans
Vector/intermediate
host: Tsetse flies (genus
Glossina
spp.)
Geographical
location: Central and East
central
Organs
affected: Blood,
central nervous system.
Symptoms
and clinical signs: Lymph nodes swell,
increasing
apathy, mental dullness, tremor of
the tongue, hands and trunk, anemia
due to lysis of rbc's, somnambulism.
Treatment: Arsenic drugs, suramin, pentamidine,
Berenil.