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Review
. 1998 Oct;79(2):95-107.
doi: 10.1016/s0304-4017(98)00146-0.

Trypanosoma evansi and T. equiperdum: distribution, biology, treatment and phylogenetic relationship (a review)

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Review

Trypanosoma evansi and T. equiperdum: distribution, biology, treatment and phylogenetic relationship (a review)

R Brun et al. Vet Parasitol. 1998 Oct.

Abstract

Trypanosoma evansi and T. equiperdum were compared regarding their ultrastructure, their mammalian hosts, way of transmission, pathogenicity, diagnosis and treatment, and biochemical and molecular characteristics. Electron microscopic investigation revealed no ultrastructural differences between the two species except that there were more coated vesicles in the flagellar pocket of T. equiperdum. Biological, biochemical and molecular studies were reviewed and exhibited many similarities between T. evansi and T. equiperdum. The most prominent differences between the two species are the presence of maxicircles in T. equiperdum, which are missing in T. evansi, and the route of transmission. While T. evansi is transmitted by biting flies, T. equiperdum is transmitted from one equine host to another during copulation when mucous membranes come into contact. Otherwise the two species are remarkably similar. The phylogenetic relationship between the two species and T. b. brucei is being discussed, and the hypothesis is proposed that T. evansi arose from a clone of T. equiperdum which lost its maxicircles.

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