EN
Neither physiological nor pathological changes following treatments explained why trypanosomes in the same group of experimentally treated animals correlated in virulence. Also, they behaved like each other but not similar to other groups despite the same T. evansi injected strain. The current study aims to discuss whether molecular changes might occur to Trypanosoma evansi isolates followed treatments are responsible for that difference or not. Ten preserved isolates from T. evansi after previous treatments besides the original strain of T. evansi that injected before treatments were used in the present study. These isolates were intraperitoneally inoculated in 11 groups of male Wister Albino rats with equal doses. Parasitological findings and the molecular changes accompanied were discussed along with the experiment based on PCR-TR3/TR4 specific-primers. The study also achieved alignments, gene sequence and phylogenetic analysis for submitted and reference strains belong to T. evansi, T. brucei, T. b. brucei, and T. b. gambiense deposited in GenBank. The present results assessed molecularly the effectiveness and highly antitrypanosomal activity of human plasmas O+ and A+ on T. evansi than others, and how their strains drifted from its original sequence to the nearest form of T. brucei. At the same time, T. evansi in other plant extract groups multiplied progressively like cancer cells and became more virulent and close to reference strains of T. evansi. Our data further indicated that T. evansi after treatment was a paraphyletic group. It also corroborated the antitrypanosomal activityspecificity and the molecular changes occurring were correlated to the type of treatment.