Recent studies of captive and wild-living apes in Africa have uncovered evidence of numerous new Plasmodium species, one of which was identified as the immediate precursor of human Plasmodium falciparum. These findings raise the question whether wild apes could be a recurrent source of Plasmodium infections in humans. This question is not new, but was the subject of intense investigation by researchers in the first half of the last century. Re-examination of their work in the context of recent molecular findings provides a new framework to understand the diversity of Plasmodium species and to assess the risk of future cross-species transmissions to humans in the context of proposed malaria eradication programs
Recent molecular exploration of the Plasmodium species circulating in great apes in Africa has revea...
Plasmodium falciparum is the major human malaria agent responsible for 200 to 300 million infections...
Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax cause over 95% of all human malaria infections. To contro...
Recent studies of captive and wild-living apes in Africa have uncovered evidence of numerous new Pla...
Recent studies of captive and wild-living apes in Africa have uncovered evidence of numerous new Pla...
AbstractRecent studies have revealed a remarkable molecular diversity of Plasmodium parasites in gre...
Recent studies have revealed a remarkable molecular diversity of Plasmodium parasites in great apes ...
Plasmodium reichenowi, a chimpanzee parasite, was until very recently the only known close relative ...
International audienceWe investigated two mitochondrial genes (cytb and cox1), one plastid gene (tuf...
Plasmodium falciparum is the most prevalent and lethal of the malaria parasites infecting humans, ye...
African great apes are naturally infected by a multitude of Plasmodium species most of them recently...
African great apes are naturally infected by a multitude of Plasmodium species most of them recently...
We investigated two mitochondrial genes (cytb and cox1), one plastid gene (tufA), and one nuclear ge...
Wild-living chimpanzees and gorillas harbor a multitude of Plasmodium species, including six of the ...
<div><p>African great apes are naturally infected by a multitude of <i>Plasmodium</i> species most o...
Recent molecular exploration of the Plasmodium species circulating in great apes in Africa has revea...
Plasmodium falciparum is the major human malaria agent responsible for 200 to 300 million infections...
Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax cause over 95% of all human malaria infections. To contro...
Recent studies of captive and wild-living apes in Africa have uncovered evidence of numerous new Pla...
Recent studies of captive and wild-living apes in Africa have uncovered evidence of numerous new Pla...
AbstractRecent studies have revealed a remarkable molecular diversity of Plasmodium parasites in gre...
Recent studies have revealed a remarkable molecular diversity of Plasmodium parasites in great apes ...
Plasmodium reichenowi, a chimpanzee parasite, was until very recently the only known close relative ...
International audienceWe investigated two mitochondrial genes (cytb and cox1), one plastid gene (tuf...
Plasmodium falciparum is the most prevalent and lethal of the malaria parasites infecting humans, ye...
African great apes are naturally infected by a multitude of Plasmodium species most of them recently...
African great apes are naturally infected by a multitude of Plasmodium species most of them recently...
We investigated two mitochondrial genes (cytb and cox1), one plastid gene (tufA), and one nuclear ge...
Wild-living chimpanzees and gorillas harbor a multitude of Plasmodium species, including six of the ...
<div><p>African great apes are naturally infected by a multitude of <i>Plasmodium</i> species most o...
Recent molecular exploration of the Plasmodium species circulating in great apes in Africa has revea...
Plasmodium falciparum is the major human malaria agent responsible for 200 to 300 million infections...
Plasmodium falciparum and Plasmodium vivax cause over 95% of all human malaria infections. To contro...