Publications by authors named "Laila Viana de Almeida"

Article Synopsis
  • Repetitive elements in complex eukaryotic genomes, like that of Trypanosoma cruzi (the Chagas disease parasite), lead to fragmented assembly and underestimate gene variability, particularly in multigene families responsible for host interactions.
  • * Our new read-based approach estimates the variability and copy number of key multigene families (MASP, TcMUC, and Trans-Sialidase) across multiple parasite strains, revealing distinct patterns of variation and higher variability in hybrid strains.
  • * The findings suggest focusing on TS antigens could enhance diagnosis and vaccine design for Chagas disease, and the methodology is adaptable for studying multicopy genes in other organisms, enabling better insights into complex genomes.
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Leishmania (Leishmania) major is an important agent of cutaneous leishmaniasis, having as a vector sandflies belonging to the genus Phlebotomus. Although this species has been described as restricted to the Old World, parasites similar to L. major have been isolated from South American patients who have never travelled abroad.

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Leishmaniasis encompasses a group of diverse clinical diseases caused by protozoan parasites of the Leishmania genus. This disease is a major public health problem in the New World affecting people exposed in endemic regions. The city of Governador Valadares (Minas Gerais/Brazil) is a re-emerging area for visceral leishmaniasis, with 191 human cases reported from 2008 to 2017 and a lethality rate of 14.

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Background: Trypanosoma cruzi, the etiologic agent of Chagas disease, is currently divided into six discrete typing units (DTUs), named TcI-TcVI. TcII is among the major DTUs enrolled in human infections in South America southern cone, where it is associated with severe cardiac and digestive symptoms. Despite the importance of TcII in Chagas disease epidemiology and pathology, so far, no genome-wide comparisons of the mitochondrial and nuclear genomes of TcII field isolates have been performed to track the variability and evolution of this DTU in endemic regions.

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