Publications by authors named "Claudia Chipana-Ramos"

Anthropogenic environmental alterations such as urbanization can threaten native populations as well as create novel environments that allow human pests and pathogens to thrive. As the number and size of urban environments increase globally, it is more important than ever to understand the dispersal dynamics of hosts, vectors and pathogens of zoonotic disease systems. For example, a protozoan parasite and the causative agent of Chagas disease in humans, Trypanosoma cruzi, recently colonized and spread through the city of Arequipa, Peru.

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Article Synopsis
  • * The study focuses on the invasion pattern of Trypanosoma cruzi, the parasite that causes Chagas disease, in Arequipa, Peru, highlighting its importance in urban health contexts.
  • * Phylogenetic analysis indicates that only one lineage of T. cruzi has successfully established in Arequipa, despite multiple introductions, prompting discussions about why other lineages haven’t settled.
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Background: Sexual reproduction provides an evolutionary advantageous mechanism that combines favorable mutations that have arisen in separate lineages into the same individual. This advantage is especially pronounced in microparasites as allelic reassortment among individuals caused by sexual reproduction promotes allelic diversity at immune evasion genes within individuals which is often essential to evade host immune systems. Despite these advantages, many eukaryotic microparasites exhibit highly-clonal population structures suggesting that genetic exchange through sexual reproduction is rare.

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