African trypanosomes are vector-borne haemoparasites that cause African trypanosomiasis in humans and animals. Parasite survival in the bloodstream depends on immune evasion, achieved by antigenic variation of the Variant Surface Glycoprotein (VSG) coating the trypanosome cell surface. Recombination, or rather directed gene conversion, is fundamental in Trypanosoma brucei, as both a mechanism of VSG gene switching and of generating antigenic diversity during infections. Trypanosoma vivax is a related, livestock pathogen also displaying antigenic variation, but whose VSG lack key structures necessary for gene conversion in T. brucei. Thus, this study tests a long-standing prediction that T. vivax has a more restricted antigenic repertoire. Here we show that global VSG repertoire is broadly conserved across diverse T. vivax clinical strains. We use sequence mapping, coalescent approaches and experimental infections to show that recombination plays little, if any, role in diversifying T. vivax VSG sequences. These results explain interspecific differences in disease, such as propensity for self-cure, and indicate that either T. vivax has an alternate mechanism for immune evasion or else a distinct transmission strategy that reduces its reliance on long-term persistence. The lack of recombination driving antigenic diversity in T. vivax has immediate consequences for both the current mechanistic model of antigenic variation in African trypanosomes and species differences in virulence and transmission strategy, requiring us to reconsider the wider epidemiology of animal African trypanosomiasis.
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