Ticks are blood-feeding ectoparasites with distinct genomic reductions, inevitably linking them to a parasitic life-style. Ticks have lost the genomic coding and, thus, biochemical capacity to synthesize heme, an essential metabolic cofactor, de novo. Instead, they are equipped with acquisition and distribution pathways for re-use of host heme. Unlike insects or mammals, ticks and mites cannot cleave the porphyrin ring of heme to release iron. Bioavailable of iron is thus acquired by ticks from the host serum transferrin. Somatic trafficking of iron, however, is independent of heme and is mediated by a secretory type of ferritin. Heme and iron systemic homeostasis in ticks represents, therefore, key adaptive traits enabling successful feeding and reproduction.
Independent somatic distribution of heme and iron in ticks.
J. Perner,O. Hajdušek,Petr Kopáček
Published 2022 in Current Opinion in Insect Science
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- Publication year
2022
- Venue
Current Opinion in Insect Science
- Publication date
2022-03-01
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
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Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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