نتایج جستجو برای: asexual parasites

تعداد نتایج: 43061  

Journal: :Antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy 2015
Takeshi Q Tanaka W Armand Guiguemde David S Barnett Maxim I Maron Jaeki Min Michele C Connelly Praveen Kumar Suryadevara R Kiplin Guy Kim C Williamson

Forty percent of the world's population is threatened by malaria, which is caused by Plasmodium parasites and results in an estimated 200 million clinical cases and 650,000 deaths each year. Drug resistance has been reported for all commonly used antimalarials and has prompted screens to identify new drug candidates. However, many of these new candidates have not been evaluated against the para...

Journal: :Biology letters 2005
Michael Tobler Ingo Schlupp

The maintenance of sexual reproduction in the face of its supposed costs is a major paradox in evolutionary biology. The Red Queen hypothesis, which states that sex is an adaptation to fast-evolving parasites, is currently one of the most recognized explanations for the ubiquity of sex and predicts that asexual lineages should suffer from a higher parasite load if they coexist with closely rela...

Journal: :The Journal of infectious diseases 2008
Karen I Barnes Francesca Little Aaron Mabuza Nicros Mngomezulu John Govere David Durrheim Cally Roper Bill Watkins Nicholas J White

BACKGROUND Although malaria treatment aims primarily to eliminate the asexual blood stages that cause illness, reducing the carriage of gametocytes is critical for limiting malaria transmission and the spread of resistance. METHODS Clinical and parasitological responses to the fixed-dose combination of sulfadoxine and pyrimethamine in patients with uncomplicated falciparum malaria were assess...

2012
Matthew L. Jones Mark O. Collins David Goulding Jyoti S. Choudhary Julian C. Rayner

Asexual stage Plasmodium falciparum replicates and undergoes a tightly regulated developmental process in human erythrocytes. One mechanism involved in the regulation of this process is posttranslational modification (PTM) of parasite proteins. Palmitoylation is a PTM in which cysteine residues undergo a reversible lipid modification, which can regulate target proteins in diverse ways. Using co...

Journal: :Science 2010
Christopher G Wilson Paul W Sherman

Asexuality has major theoretical advantages over sexual reproduction. An important evolutionary puzzle, therefore, is why exclusively asexual metazoan lineages rarely endure. The Red Queen hypothesis posits that asexuality is rapidly extinguished by relentlessly coevolving parasites and pathogens. If so, any long-lasting asexual lineage must have unusual alternative mechanisms to deal with thes...

Journal: :Molecular Microbiology 2009
Claudia Schnick Spencer D Polley Quinton L Fivelman Lisa C Ranford-Cartwright Shane R Wilkinson James A Brannigan Anthony J Wilkinson David A Baker

Malaria pathology is caused by multiplication of asexual parasites within erythrocytes, whereas mosquito transmission of malaria is mediated by sexual precursor cells (gametocytes). Microarray analysis identified glycerol kinase (GK) as the second most highly upregulated gene in Plasmodium falciparum gametocytes with no expression detectable in asexual blood stage parasites. Phosphorylation of ...

Journal: :Journal of immunology 2008
Elodie Belnoue Tatiana Voza Fabio T M Costa Anne Charlotte Grüner Marjorie Mauduit Daniela Santoro Rosa Nadya Depinay Michèle Kayibanda Ana Margarida Vigário Dominique Mazier Georges Snounou Photini Sinnis Laurent Rénia

Immunity to malaria has long been thought to be stage-specific. In this study we show that immunization of BALB/c mice with live erythrocytes infected with nonlethal strains of Plasmodium yoelii under curative chloroquine cover conferred protection not only against challenge by blood stage parasites but also against sporozoite challenge. This cross-stage protection was dose-dependent and long l...

2013
Carolina B. Moraes Thierry Dorval Mónica Contreras-Dominguez Fernando de M. Dossin Michael A. E. Hansen Auguste Genovesio Lucio H. Freitas-Junior

Increasing evidence shows that the spatial organization of transcription is an important epigenetic factor in eukaryotic gene regulation. The malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum shows a remarkably complex pattern of gene expression during the erythrocytic cycle, paradoxically contrasting with the relatively low number of putative transcription factors encoded by its genome. The spatial organ...

Journal: :Blood 2003
Virgilio L Lew Teresa Tiffert Hagai Ginsburg

During their asexual reproduction cycle (about 48 hours) in human red cells, Plasmodium falciparum parasites consume most of the host cell hemoglobin, far more than they require for protein biosynthesis. They also induce a large increase in the permeability of the host cell plasma membrane to allow for an increased traffic of nutrients and waste products. Why do the parasites digest hemoglobin ...

2009
R Bhoora E Zweygarth A J Guthrie F Jongejan M C Oosthuizen B L Penzhorn N E Collins J Boomker K Ebersohn W Kilian

Although eliminating the pathogenic asexual stages of Plasmodium falciparum is pivotal for the successful treatment of individual symptomatic patients, at a population level reducing the carriage of viable gametocytes is crucial for limiting the transmission of malaria parasites. Gametocytes are the non-pathogenic sexual stages of the P. falciparum parasite responsible for transmission of the i...

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