Abstract
The mitochondrial DNA of trypanosomatid parasites consists of thousands of catenated minicircles and dozens of maxicircles that form a complex network structure, the kinetoplast (kDNA). Although kDNA replication and segregation during mitotic division are well studied, its inheritance during genetic exchange events remains unclear. In Trypanosoma brucei, hybrids inherit minicircles biparentally but retain maxicircles from a single parent. Although biparental inheritance of minicircles has been described in natural Trypanosoma cruzi hybrids, this process has not been explored in laboratory-generated hybrids of this parasite. In the present study, we analyzed kDNA inheritance in T. cruzi experimental hybrids using a comprehensive minicircle hypervariable region (mHVR) database and genome sequencing data. Our findings revealed biparental inheritance of minicircles, with hybrid lines retaining mHVRs from both parents for over 800 generations. In contrast, maxicircles were exclusively inherited from one parent. Unexpectedly, we observed an increase in kDNA content in hybrids, affecting both minicircles and maxicircles, and exhibiting instability over time. To explain these findings, we propose a Replicative Mixing (REMIX) model, where the hybrid inherits one kinetoplast from each parent and they are replicated allowing minicircle mixing. Instead maxicircle networks remain physically separated, leading to uniparental fixation after segregation in the first cell division of the hybrid. This model challenges previous assumptions regarding kDNA inheritance and provides a new framework for understanding kinetoplast dynamics in hybrid trypanosomes.