20 February 2026, 11:00
How do African trypanosomes persist in mammalian hosts?
Description AbstractAfrican Trypanosomes proliferate within the bloodstream and tissue spaces of mammals and can maintain a long term infection often lasting for years To do this trypanosomes must avoid the host adaptive and innate immune response at the same time as acquiring nutrients from the host There is a good understanding of how the adaptive immune response is distracted through a population survival strategy based on antigenic variation a densely packed surface coat made of a variant surface glycoprotein VSG There is also a strong selection pressure to prolong the survival of individual trypanosomes presumably to increase the chances of returning to a tsetse fly the definitive host There is rapid clearance of antibodies bound to the cell surface and a set of conserved receptors that decrease the effectiveness of complement pathways A second set of receptors is involved in the acquisition of host macromolecular nutrients Why do these conserved receptors not lead to immune clearance Work on how the receptors bind ligands how trypanosomes have evolved to have a wide host range and what happens when on ligand binding have been integrated to form a model of how they are able to form life long infections Connection detailsZoom https embl org zoom us j 99010203982 pwd eKlBm1821yrpjddaCbanN6CjooJL8y 1 Meeting ID 990 1020 3982 Password 717935 Please note that the talk will be recorded For the FAQ section as a zoom participant please use either the chat function the host will read out your question or the raise your hand function and turn on your microphone... AbstractAfrican Trypanosomes proliferate within the bloodstream and tissue spaces of mammals and can maintain a long-term infection often lasting for years. To do this, trypanosomes must avoid the host adaptive and innate immune response at the same time as acquiring nutrients from the host. There is a good understanding of how the adaptive immune response is distracted through a population survival strategy based on antigenic variation a densely packed surface coat made of a variant surface glycoprotein (VSG). There is also a strong selection pressure to prolong the survival of individual trypanosomes presumably to increase the chances of returning to a tsetse fly, the definitive host. There is rapid clearance of antibodies bound to the cell surface and a set of conserved receptors that decrease the effectiveness of complement pathways. A second set of receptors is involved in the...
Speaker(s): Mark Carrington, Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom
Host: Eva Kowalinski
Place: EMBL Grenoble Seminar Room
EMBL Grenoble, Virtual
Additional information
Abstract
African Trypanosomes proliferate within the bloodstream and tissue spaces of mammals and can maintain a long-term infection often lasting for years. To do this, trypanosomes must avoid the host adaptive and innate immune response at the same time as acquiring nutrients from the host. There is a good understanding of how the adaptive immune response is distracted through a population survival strategy based on antigenic variation a densely packed surface coat made of a variant surface glycoprotein (VSG). There is also a strong selection pressure to prolong the survival of individual trypanosomes presumably to increase the chances of returning to a tsetse fly, the definitive host. There is rapid clearance of antibodies bound to the cell surface and a set of conserved receptors that decrease the effectiveness of complement pathways. A second set of receptors is involved in the acquisition of host macromolecular nutrients.
Why do these conserved receptors not lead to immune clearance? Work on how the receptors bind ligands, how trypanosomes have evolved to have a wide host range, and what happens when on ligand binding have been integrated to form a model of how they are able to form life-long infections.
Connection details
Zoom*: https://embl-org.zoom.us/j/99010203982?pwd=eKlBm1821yrpjddaCbanN6CjooJL8y.1
(Meeting ID: 990 1020 3982, Password: 717935)
Please note that the talk will be recorded.
*For the FAQ section, as a zoom participant, please use either the chat function (the host will read out your question) or the “raise your hand” function and turn on your microphone.