Journal article
Evolution and function of carbohydrate reserve biosynthesis in parasitic protists
JE Ralton, MF Sernee, MJ McConville
Trends in Parasitology | CELL PRESS | Published : 2021
Abstract
Nearly all eukaryotic cells synthesize carbohydrate reserves, such as glycogen, starch, or low-molecular-weight oligosaccharides. However, a number of parasitic protists have lost this capacity while others have lost, and subsequently evolved, entirely new pathways. Recent studies suggest that retention, loss, or acquisition of these pathways in different protists is intimately linked to their lifestyle. In particular, parasites with carbohydrate reserves often establish long-lived chronic infections and/or produce environmental cysts, whereas loss of these pathways is associated with parasites that have highly proliferative and metabolically active life-cycle stages. The evolution of mannog..
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Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by funding from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) . M.J.M. is an NHMRC Principal Research Fellow.