Journal article

Disruption of erythrocyte rosettes and agglutination of erythrocytes infected with Plasmodium falciparum by the sera of Papua New Guineans

SJ Rogerson, HP Beck, F Al-Yaman, B Currie, MP Alpers, GV Brown

Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene | ROYAL SOC TROPICAL MEDICINE | Published : 1996

Abstract

People living in areas endemic for Plasmodium falciparum develop humoral responses which may contribute to protection against clinical disease but the specificity of such protective antibody responses remains to be defined. Antibodies disrupting erythrocyte rosettes have been associated with protection against cerebral malaria, and antibodies agglutinating infected erythrocytes with reduced episodes of clinical disease. We have studied the capacity of serum from Papua New Guinean adults and children with a spectrum of malaria exposure, including children and adults at the time of clinical disease, to disrupt erythrocyte rosettes and cause agglutination of infected erythrocytes. Using a singl..

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University of Melbourne Researchers