Abstract

RNA interference or RNAi is defined as the mechanism through which gene-specific, double-stranded RNA (dsRNA) triggers degradation of homologous transcripts. Besides providing an invaluable tool to downregulate gene expression in a variety of organisms, it is now evident that RNAi extends its tentacles into both the nucleus and the cytoplasm and is involved in a variety of gene silencing phenomena. Here we review the current status of RNAi in protozoan parasites that cause diseases of considerable medical and veterinary importance throughout Africa, Asia and the Americas. RNAi was first discovered in Trypanosoma brucei, a species of the family Trypanosomatidae, and it rapidly became the method of choice to downregulate gene expression in these organisms. At the same time, mechanistic studies exposed a role for RNAi in the control of retroposon transcript abundance. Whereas RNAi is also present in T. congolense, other members of the same family of organisms, namely T. cruzi and Leishmania major, are RNAi-negative. In apicomplexan parasites, there is experimental evidence for RNAi in Plasmodium, but this is not supported by their genetic make up. In contrast, the genome of Toxoplasma gondii harbours gene candidates with convincing similarity to 'classical' RNAi genes. Thus, as previously shown in fungi, protozoan parasites are genetically heterogeneous as far as the RNAi pathway is concerned. Finally, database mining predicts that Entamoeba histolytica and Giardia intestinalis have an RNAi pathway and the presence of RNAi genes in Giardia supports the view that gene silencing by dsRNA appeared very early during evolution of the eukaryotic lineage.

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