Male and female gametocytes are the components of the malaria parasite life cycle which are taken up from an infected host bloodstream by mosquitoes and thus mediate disease transmission. These gamete precursors are morphologically and functionally quite distinct from their asexual blood stage counterparts and this is reflected in their distinct patterns of gene expression, cellular development and metabolism. Recent transcriptome, proteome and reverse genetic studies have added valuable information to that obtained from traditional studies. However, we still have no answer to the fundamental question regarding sexual development: 'what triggers gametocytogenesis'? In the current climate of eradication/elimination, tackling transmission by ...
During malaria infection, Plasmodium spp. parasites cyclically invade red blood cells and can follow...
Malaria parasites have a complex life cycle with asexual multiplication in a vertebrate host and obl...
There is a continuous and urgent need for novel antimalarial agents with new modes of action due to ...
Malaria remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide, despite decades of public health effor...
BACKGROUND: Gametocytes are the Plasmodium life stage that is solely responsible for malaria transmi...
In vertebrate hosts, malaria parasites produce specialized male and female sexual stages (gametocyte...
Malaria is a devastating global disease with several hundred million clinical cases and just under 1...
Despite extensive eradication campaigns malaria remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality wor...
Plasmodium, the causative agent of malaria, has a complex life cycle requiring a mammalian host and ...
Malaria parasites rely on specialized stages, called gametocytes, to ensure human-to-human transmiss...
BACKGROUND: Transmission of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum from humans to the mosquito v...
Malaria is the disease caused by the apicomplexan parasites belonging to the genus Plasmodium. Expan...
Understanding transmission biology at an individual level is a key component of intervention strateg...
SummaryGametocytes, the precursor cells of malaria-parasite gametes, circulate in the blood and are ...
Human to vector transmission of malaria requires that some blood-stage parasites ab...
During malaria infection, Plasmodium spp. parasites cyclically invade red blood cells and can follow...
Malaria parasites have a complex life cycle with asexual multiplication in a vertebrate host and obl...
There is a continuous and urgent need for novel antimalarial agents with new modes of action due to ...
Malaria remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide, despite decades of public health effor...
BACKGROUND: Gametocytes are the Plasmodium life stage that is solely responsible for malaria transmi...
In vertebrate hosts, malaria parasites produce specialized male and female sexual stages (gametocyte...
Malaria is a devastating global disease with several hundred million clinical cases and just under 1...
Despite extensive eradication campaigns malaria remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality wor...
Plasmodium, the causative agent of malaria, has a complex life cycle requiring a mammalian host and ...
Malaria parasites rely on specialized stages, called gametocytes, to ensure human-to-human transmiss...
BACKGROUND: Transmission of the malaria parasite Plasmodium falciparum from humans to the mosquito v...
Malaria is the disease caused by the apicomplexan parasites belonging to the genus Plasmodium. Expan...
Understanding transmission biology at an individual level is a key component of intervention strateg...
SummaryGametocytes, the precursor cells of malaria-parasite gametes, circulate in the blood and are ...
Human to vector transmission of malaria requires that some blood-stage parasites ab...
During malaria infection, Plasmodium spp. parasites cyclically invade red blood cells and can follow...
Malaria parasites have a complex life cycle with asexual multiplication in a vertebrate host and obl...
There is a continuous and urgent need for novel antimalarial agents with new modes of action due to ...