The spread of artemisinin-resistant parasites could lead to higher incidence of patients with malaria complications. However, there are no current treatments that directly dislodge sequestered parasites from the microvasculature. We show that four common antiplasmodial drugs do not disperse rosettes (erythrocyte clusters formed by malaria parasites) and therefore develop a cell-based high-throughput assay to identify potential rosette-disrupting compounds. A pilot screen of 2693 compounds identified Malaria Box compound MMV006764 as a potential candidate. Although it reduced rosetting by a modest 20%, MMV006764 was validated to be similarly effective against both blood group O and A rosettes of three laboratory parasite lines. Coupled with ...
Malaria parasites like Plasmodium falciparum multiply in red blood cells (RBC), which are cleared fr...
International audienceBackground: Different strategies for improvement of malaria control and elimin...
The emergence of resistance to available antimalarials requires the urgent development of new medici...
The spread of artemisinin-resistant parasites could lead to higher incidence of pati...
The spread of artemisinin-resistant parasites could lead to higher incidence of pat...
An assay was developed measuring the disruption of rosettes between Plasmodium falciparuminfected (t...
An assay was developed measuring the disruption of rosettes between Plasmodium falciparuminfected (t...
In malaria, rosetting is a phenomenon involving the cytoadherence of uninfected erythrocytes to infe...
Rosetting remains the dominant malaria parasite adhesion phenotype associated with severe disease an...
<div><p>Rosetting remains the dominant malaria parasite adhesion phenotype associated with severe di...
BACKGROUND: Malaria remains a disease of devastating global impact, killing more than 800,000 people...
Malaria kills over 500,000 people each year and over a third of the global population is at risk of ...
With emerging resistance to frontline treatments, it is vital that new drugs are identified to targe...
The in vivo and in vitro effects of antimalarials on cytoadherence and rosette formation were studie...
The causative agent of malignant tertian malaria, Plasmodium falciparum undergoes an arrested growth...
Malaria parasites like Plasmodium falciparum multiply in red blood cells (RBC), which are cleared fr...
International audienceBackground: Different strategies for improvement of malaria control and elimin...
The emergence of resistance to available antimalarials requires the urgent development of new medici...
The spread of artemisinin-resistant parasites could lead to higher incidence of pati...
The spread of artemisinin-resistant parasites could lead to higher incidence of pat...
An assay was developed measuring the disruption of rosettes between Plasmodium falciparuminfected (t...
An assay was developed measuring the disruption of rosettes between Plasmodium falciparuminfected (t...
In malaria, rosetting is a phenomenon involving the cytoadherence of uninfected erythrocytes to infe...
Rosetting remains the dominant malaria parasite adhesion phenotype associated with severe disease an...
<div><p>Rosetting remains the dominant malaria parasite adhesion phenotype associated with severe di...
BACKGROUND: Malaria remains a disease of devastating global impact, killing more than 800,000 people...
Malaria kills over 500,000 people each year and over a third of the global population is at risk of ...
With emerging resistance to frontline treatments, it is vital that new drugs are identified to targe...
The in vivo and in vitro effects of antimalarials on cytoadherence and rosette formation were studie...
The causative agent of malignant tertian malaria, Plasmodium falciparum undergoes an arrested growth...
Malaria parasites like Plasmodium falciparum multiply in red blood cells (RBC), which are cleared fr...
International audienceBackground: Different strategies for improvement of malaria control and elimin...
The emergence of resistance to available antimalarials requires the urgent development of new medici...