Saturday, May 17, 2025

Answer to Case 776

 Answer to the Parasite Case of the Week 776: Toxoplasma gondii tachyzoites. As the name implies, the tachyzoite is the rapidly dividing stage of the parasite (tachy is from the Greek takhus meaning rapid, swift). Tachyzoites invade cells and divide rapidly within parasitophorous vacuoles, ultimately rupturing infected cells. Tachyzoites divide by endodyogeny, an interesting form of replication seen with some coccidia in which two daughter cells develop internally within the parent cell without nuclear conjugation. The parent cell is consumed in the process - yikes!

Shown here is the classic arc-shaped tachyzoite and 2 daughter cells resulting from the process of endodyogeny:


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