Abstract
Hammondia hammondi is the nearest relative of Toxoplasma gondii, but unlike T. gondii is obligately heteroxenous. We have compared H. hammondi and T. gondii development in vitro and identified multiple H. hammondi-specific growth states. Despite replicating slower than T. gondii, H. hammondi was resistant to pH-induced tissue cyst formation early after excystation. However, in the absence of stress H. hammondi spontaneously converted to a terminally differentiated tissue cyst stage while T. gondii did not. Cultured H. hammondi could infect new host cells for up to 8 days following excystation, and this period was exploited to generate stably transgenic H. hammondi. Coupled with RNAseq analyses, our data clearly show that H. hammondi zoites grow as stringently regulated life stages that are fundamentally distinct from T. gondii tachyzoites and bradyzoites.