The role of immunity in mosquito-induced attenuation of malaria virulence

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Abstract

A recent study found that mosquito-transmitted (MT) lines of rodent malaria parasites elicit a more effective immune response than non-transmitted lines maintained by serial blood passage (non-MT), thereby causing lower parasite densities in the blood and less pathology to the host. The authors attribute these changes to higher diversity in expression of antigen-encoding genes in MT cf. non-MT lines. Alternative explanations that are equally parsimonious with these new data, and results from previous studies, suggest that this conclusion may be premature. © 2014 Mackinnon; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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APA

Mackinnon, M. J. (2014, January 21). The role of immunity in mosquito-induced attenuation of malaria virulence. Malaria Journal. https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-13-25

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