Affiliation:
1. Department of Biological, Geological and Environmental Sciences, Cleveland State University, Cleveland, OH 44115, USA
Abstract
Colpodella species are free-living protists phylogenetically related to apicomplexans. Colpodella sp. have been detected in human and animal tissues, as well as in ticks and biting flies. The trophozoite and cyst stages of Colpodella species can be distinguished from stages of the prey Parabodo caudatus using Sam-Yellowe’s trichrome staining. Colpodella species obtain nutrients by attaching to their prey, aspirating the prey’s cytoplasmic contents into a posterior food vacuole and encysting. It is unclear whether both trophozoite and cyst stages are present in human and animal tissues. Molecular techniques have detected Colpodella species in human blood, cerebrospinal fluid, and in ticks and flies. However, no morphological information was reported to aid life-cycle stage identification of Colpodella species. This review discusses the increased reports of Colpodella species detection in animals and in arthropods and the need to identify stages present in human and animal tissues. We previously used Sam-Yellowe’s trichrome staining to identify life-cycle stages of Colpodella sp. In this review, we examine the reports of Colpodella species detection in human and animal tissues to determine whether the identification of Colpodella species represents true infections or contaminations of samples collected during routine surveillance of piroplasm infections in animals and arthropods. This review also aims to provide insights regarding Colpodella, nutrient uptake, and the survival of Colpodella sp. within humans, animals, and arthropods, as well as whether the attachment of trophozoites to cells occurs in tissues leading to myzocytosis and endocytosis.
Funder
NIH Bridges to Baccalaureate Program, Cuyahoga Community College, Cleveland Ohio
Reference45 articles.
1. Bargieri, D., Lagal, V., Andenmatten, N., Tardieux, I., Meissner, M., and Ménard, R. (2014). Host cell invasion by apicomplexan parasites: The junction conundrum. PLoS Pathog., 10.
2. Evolution of apicomplexan secretory organelles;Gubbels;Int. J. Parasitol.,2012
3. Valigurová, A., and Florent, I. (2021). Nutrient Acquisition and Attachment Strategies in Basal Lineages: A Tough Nut to Crack in the Evolutionary Puzzle of Apicomplexa. Microorganisms, 9.
4. Why do malaria parasites increase host erythrocyte permeability?;Desai;Trends Parasitol.,2014
5. New records of the ectoparasitic flagellate Colpodella gonderi on non-Colpoda ciliates;Olmo;J. Int. Microbiol.,2011