Book Chapter
Ultrastructure of the asexual blood stages of plasmodium falciparum
E Hanssen, KN Goldie, L Tilley
ELECTRON MICROSCOPY OF MODEL SYSTEMS | Methods in Cell Biology | ELSEVIER ACADEMIC PRESS INC | Published : 2010
Abstract
Plasmodium falciparum is the most deadly of the human malaria parasites. The particular virulence of this species derives from its ability to subvert the physiology of its host during the blood stages of its development. The parasite grows and divides within erythrocytes, feeding on the hemoglobin, and remodeling its host cells so they adhere to blood vessel walls. The advent of molecular transfection technology, coupled with optical microscopy of fluorescent protein reporters, has greatly improved our understanding of the ways in which the malaria parasite alters its host cell. However, a full interpretation of the information from these studies requires similar advances in our knowledge of..
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