Sexual development is integral to the transmission of Plasmodium parasites between vertebrates and mosquitos. Recent years have seen great advances in understanding the gene expression that underlies commitment of asexual parasites to differentiate into sexual gametocyte stages, then how they mature and form gametes once inside a mosquito. Less well understood is how parasites differentially control development to become males or females. Plasmodium parasites are haploid at the time of sexual differentiation, but a clonal haploid line can produce both male and female gametocytes, so they presumably lack the sex-determining alleles present in some other eukaryotes. Though the molecular switch to initiate male or female development remains hi...
Understanding how malaria parasites commit to sexual development is key to the development of transm...
Successful development of Plasmodium sexual stages is essential for parasite survival, but the genes...
Male and female gametocytes are the components of the malaria parasite life cycle which are taken up...
Sexual development is integral to the transmission of Plasmodium parasites between vertebrates and m...
Malaria is the disease caused by the apicomplexan parasites belonging to the genus Plasmodium. Expan...
Malaria is a devastating global disease with several hundred million clinical cases and just under 1...
Malaria parasites have a complex life cycle with asexual multiplication in a vertebrate host and obl...
A renewed global commitment to malaria elimination lends urgency to understanding the biology of Pla...
BACKGROUND: The clinical symptoms of malaria are caused by the asexual replication of Plasmodium par...
Malaria transmission to mosquitoes requires a developmental switch in asexually dividing blood-stage...
SummaryThe mechanisms underlying sexual stage switching in Plasmodium spp. have hitherto remained a ...
Contains fulltext : 32884.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Gametocytes, t...
SummaryGametocytes, the precursor cells of malaria-parasite gametes, circulate in the blood and are ...
Understanding transmission biology at an individual level is a key component of intervention strateg...
Sexual reproduction and meiotic sex are deeply rooted in the eukaryotic tree of life, but mechanisms...
Understanding how malaria parasites commit to sexual development is key to the development of transm...
Successful development of Plasmodium sexual stages is essential for parasite survival, but the genes...
Male and female gametocytes are the components of the malaria parasite life cycle which are taken up...
Sexual development is integral to the transmission of Plasmodium parasites between vertebrates and m...
Malaria is the disease caused by the apicomplexan parasites belonging to the genus Plasmodium. Expan...
Malaria is a devastating global disease with several hundred million clinical cases and just under 1...
Malaria parasites have a complex life cycle with asexual multiplication in a vertebrate host and obl...
A renewed global commitment to malaria elimination lends urgency to understanding the biology of Pla...
BACKGROUND: The clinical symptoms of malaria are caused by the asexual replication of Plasmodium par...
Malaria transmission to mosquitoes requires a developmental switch in asexually dividing blood-stage...
SummaryThe mechanisms underlying sexual stage switching in Plasmodium spp. have hitherto remained a ...
Contains fulltext : 32884.pdf (publisher's version ) (Closed access)Gametocytes, t...
SummaryGametocytes, the precursor cells of malaria-parasite gametes, circulate in the blood and are ...
Understanding transmission biology at an individual level is a key component of intervention strateg...
Sexual reproduction and meiotic sex are deeply rooted in the eukaryotic tree of life, but mechanisms...
Understanding how malaria parasites commit to sexual development is key to the development of transm...
Successful development of Plasmodium sexual stages is essential for parasite survival, but the genes...
Male and female gametocytes are the components of the malaria parasite life cycle which are taken up...