Trypanosoma are of the class kinetoplastida, a monophyletic[1] group of unicellular parasiticprotozoa. The name is derived from the Greektrypaô (boring) and soma (body) because of their corkscrew-like motion. Trypanosomes infect a variety of hosts and cause various disease, including the fatal disease sleeping sickness in humans.
Trypanosoma undergo a complex lifecycle which includes several different morphological forms. For example, Trypanosoma brucei is transmitted between mammalian hosts through a tsetse fly vector and undergoes a series of morphological and metabolic changes to adapt to these very different environments.
Characteristic of this order is the mitochondrial genome, known as the kinetoplast. It is made up of a highly complex series of catenatated circles and minicircles and require a cohort of proteins for organisation during cell division.
Trypanosomes have a number of biologically interesting features that has made them the object of study. For example, trypanosomes do their genetic regulation post-transcriptionally, are a classic model of antigenic variation, and edit their mitochondrial mRNA transcripts using short guide RNAs encoded in mitochondrial minicircles as templates. In addition, two life cycle forms of Trypanosoma brucei are easy to culture and are genetically pliable.
T. evansi, which causes one form of the disease surra in certain animals (a single case report of human infection in 2005 in India[2] was successfully treated with suramin[3])
^ "A new form of human trypanosomiasis in India. Description of the first human case in the world caused by Trypanosoma evansi" (2005). Wkly. Epidemiol. Rec.80 (7): 62–3. PMID 15771199.