Journal article
Plasmodium nesting: Remaking the erythrocyte from the inside out
JA Boddey, AF Cowman
Annual Review of Microbiology | Published : 2013
Abstract
One of the most fascinating and remarkable features of Plasmodium parasites, which cause malaria, is their choice of erythrocytes as the principal host cells in which to reside during infection of a vertebrate host. Parasites completely renovate the terminally differentiated cells, which lack most of the normal organelles and functions of other cells, such as a nucleus and the machinery to express and transport proteins to subcellular locations. Erythrocyte remodeling begins immediately after invasion by the Plasmodium parasite, by expression and export of many hundreds of proteins that assemble into molecular machinery in the host cell that permit protein trafficking, harvesting of nutrient..
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