'Mind-control' parasite Toxoplasma hides from the immune system with 2 key genes
  Originally published by Kamal Naha   A single-cell parasite relies on two genes that boost each other's  activity to switch into "defense mode" when attacked by the immune  system.   A new study could help scientists find a cure to lifelong infections caused by the parasite Toxoplasma gondii.   (Image credit: KATERYNA KON/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY via Getty Images)   The parasite Toxoplasma gondii  hides in up to half of humans  (opens in new tab) ,  although it rarely causes symptoms. But when it infects mice, the  single-cell organism can exert a kind of "mind control" to change the  rodents' behavior and help itself spread.  Now, researchers report being one step closer to curing T. gondii infections  in humans, which can be lifelong due to the parasite's ability to morph  into a dormant, defensive state. Two transcription factors — proteins  that switch genes "on" and "off" — lie at the root of this  metamorphosis, and the discovery...