In vertebrate hosts, malaria parasites produce specialized male and female sexual stages (gametocytes). Soon after being taken up by a mosquito, gametocytes rapidly produce gametes and, once mated, they infect their vector and can be transmitted to new hosts. Despite being the parasite stages that were first identified (over a century ago), gametocytes have remained elusive, and basic questions remain concerning their biology. However, the postgenomic era has substantiated information on the specialized molecular machinery of gametocytogenesis and expedited the development of molecular tools to detect and quantify gametocytes. The application of such highly sensitive and specific tools has opened up novel approaches and provided new insight...
Malaria parasites have a complex life cycle with asexual multiplication in a vertebrate host and obl...
Malaria, a vector-borne disease caused by Plasmodium spp., remains a major global cause of mortality...
One of the critical gaps in malaria transmission biology and surveillance is our lack of knowledge a...
Despite extensive eradication campaigns malaria remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality wor...
Male and female gametocytes are the components of the malaria parasite life cycle which are taken up...
Each year, approximately 230 million malaria cases and 400,00 malaria deaths are reported worldwide....
Malaria remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide, despite decades of public health effor...
A mosquito needs to ingest at least one male and one female gametocyte to become infected with malar...
SummaryGametocytes, the precursor cells of malaria-parasite gametes, circulate in the blood and are ...
A mosquito needs to ingest at least one male and one female gametocyte to become infected with malar...
Plasmodium gametocytes are the sexual forms of the malaria parasite essential for transmission to mo...
Gametocytes are the only form of the malaria parasite that is transmissible to the mosquito vector. ...
Understanding transmission biology at an individual level is a key component of intervention strateg...
Plasmodium falciparum remains one of the leading causes of child mortality, and nearly half of the w...
We developed a flow-cytometry-based method to separate and collect cocultured male and female Plasmo...
Malaria parasites have a complex life cycle with asexual multiplication in a vertebrate host and obl...
Malaria, a vector-borne disease caused by Plasmodium spp., remains a major global cause of mortality...
One of the critical gaps in malaria transmission biology and surveillance is our lack of knowledge a...
Despite extensive eradication campaigns malaria remains a major cause of morbidity and mortality wor...
Male and female gametocytes are the components of the malaria parasite life cycle which are taken up...
Each year, approximately 230 million malaria cases and 400,00 malaria deaths are reported worldwide....
Malaria remains one of the leading causes of death worldwide, despite decades of public health effor...
A mosquito needs to ingest at least one male and one female gametocyte to become infected with malar...
SummaryGametocytes, the precursor cells of malaria-parasite gametes, circulate in the blood and are ...
A mosquito needs to ingest at least one male and one female gametocyte to become infected with malar...
Plasmodium gametocytes are the sexual forms of the malaria parasite essential for transmission to mo...
Gametocytes are the only form of the malaria parasite that is transmissible to the mosquito vector. ...
Understanding transmission biology at an individual level is a key component of intervention strateg...
Plasmodium falciparum remains one of the leading causes of child mortality, and nearly half of the w...
We developed a flow-cytometry-based method to separate and collect cocultured male and female Plasmo...
Malaria parasites have a complex life cycle with asexual multiplication in a vertebrate host and obl...
Malaria, a vector-borne disease caused by Plasmodium spp., remains a major global cause of mortality...
One of the critical gaps in malaria transmission biology and surveillance is our lack of knowledge a...