The Genetics of Parasitism

When ruminating on the history of humanity one must also consider the blood-sucking louse, with which our destiny has been intertwined. This creature, bearing the smallest known insect genome, has associated with primates dating back at least 25 million years. Researchers at the J. Craig Venter Institute have sequenced and analyzed the body louse genome, as well as one of its obligate endosymbiont bacteria, finding that a great many genes found in the louse's free-living cousins have been lost, including those used for sensation in finding food and avoiding predation, and that the louse's own bacterial flora encode genes to synthesize nutrients not found in a blood diet. Together these findings provide a basis for the study of host-parasite evolution and could have important implications to our management of the louse as a vector for disease. 

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