Vickermania gen. nov., trypanosomatids that use two joined flagella to resist midgut peristaltic flow within the fly host.
Alexei Yu KostygovAlexander O FrolovMarina N MalyshevaAnna I GanyukovaLyudmila V ChistyakovaDaria TashyrevaMartina TesařováViktoria V SpodarevaJana RežnarováDiego H MacedoAnzhelika ButenkoClaudia M d'Avila-LevyJulius LukešVyacheslav YurchenkoPublished in: BMC biology (2020)
We propose that Vickermania developed a survival strategy that relies on constant movement preventing discharge from the host gut due to intestinal peristalsis. Since these parasites cannot attach to the midgut wall, they were forced to shorten the period of impaired motility when two separate flagella in dividing cells interfere with each other. The connection between the flagella ensures their coordinate movement until the separation of the daughter cells. We propose that Trypanosoma brucei, a severe human pathogen, during its development in the tsetse fly midgut faces the same conditions and follows the same strategy as Vickermania by employing an analogous adaptation, the flagellar connector.