A
kinetoplast is a network of circular
DNA (called kDNA) inside a large
mitochondrion that contains many copies of the
mitochondrial genome. The most common kinetoplast structure is a disk, but they have been observed in other arrangements. Kinetoplasts are only found in
protozoa of the class
Kinetoplastida. The variation in the structures of kinetoplasts may reflect phylogenic relationships between kinetoplastids. A kinetoplast is usually adjacent to the organism's
flagellar basal body, suggesting that it is tightly bound to the
cytoskeleton. In
Trypanosoma brucei this cytoskeletal connection is called the tripartite attachment complex and includes the protein p166.