In the first decade of the 21st century, we have witnessed the development of new technologies that have forever changed the way genomes are sequenced. Combined with high-throughput applications of established Sanger capillary electrophoresis, Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) is revolutionizing how parasite genomes are decoded and interrogated due to extraordinary increases in speed and decreased cost. The concurrent development and application of tools to characterise the function of these parasite genomes complements the generation of sequence data. Indeed, such tools are collectively responsible for many of today?s novel parasite biological discoveries. Thus, it is the intention of this special edition of Parasite Immunology to highlight...
The opportunities and challenges for the study and control of parasitic diseases in the 21st century...
Abstract. Malaria has been the greatest scourge of humankind for many millennia, and as a consequenc...
We thank: the WSI DNA Pipeline teams, particularly C. Griffiths, N. Park, L. Shirley, M. Quail, D. ...
In the first decade of the 21st century, we have witnessed the development of new technologies that ...
Parasitic organisms remain the scourge of the developed and underdeveloped worlds. Malaria, schistos...
Despite the advances of modern medicine, the threat of chronic illness, disfigurement, or death that...
Abstract: More than two billion people (one-third of humanity) are infected with parasitic roundworm...
The advent and integration of high-throughput '-omics' technologies (e.g. genomics, transcriptomics,...
Molecular information about eukaryotes has increased exponentially in the last decade. Sequencing of...
Recent years have seen a revolutionary change in the study of parasitic organisms. Catalysed by the ...
Billions of people and animals are infected with parasitic worms (helminths). Many of these worms ca...
More than two billion people (one-third of humanity) are infected with parasitic roundworms or flatw...
In the last decade, the rise of affordable affordable high-throughput sequencing technologies has le...
The revolution in biology that has resulted from the adoption of new methodologies of automated inst...
The human malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax is responsible for 25–40 % of the,515 million annual cas...
The opportunities and challenges for the study and control of parasitic diseases in the 21st century...
Abstract. Malaria has been the greatest scourge of humankind for many millennia, and as a consequenc...
We thank: the WSI DNA Pipeline teams, particularly C. Griffiths, N. Park, L. Shirley, M. Quail, D. ...
In the first decade of the 21st century, we have witnessed the development of new technologies that ...
Parasitic organisms remain the scourge of the developed and underdeveloped worlds. Malaria, schistos...
Despite the advances of modern medicine, the threat of chronic illness, disfigurement, or death that...
Abstract: More than two billion people (one-third of humanity) are infected with parasitic roundworm...
The advent and integration of high-throughput '-omics' technologies (e.g. genomics, transcriptomics,...
Molecular information about eukaryotes has increased exponentially in the last decade. Sequencing of...
Recent years have seen a revolutionary change in the study of parasitic organisms. Catalysed by the ...
Billions of people and animals are infected with parasitic worms (helminths). Many of these worms ca...
More than two billion people (one-third of humanity) are infected with parasitic roundworms or flatw...
In the last decade, the rise of affordable affordable high-throughput sequencing technologies has le...
The revolution in biology that has resulted from the adoption of new methodologies of automated inst...
The human malaria parasite Plasmodium vivax is responsible for 25–40 % of the,515 million annual cas...
The opportunities and challenges for the study and control of parasitic diseases in the 21st century...
Abstract. Malaria has been the greatest scourge of humankind for many millennia, and as a consequenc...
We thank: the WSI DNA Pipeline teams, particularly C. Griffiths, N. Park, L. Shirley, M. Quail, D. ...