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Blood Stage Parasites: Sufficient to Induce Protective Immunity

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Merozoites are the surface antigens and variant antigens expressed on the surface of malaria-infected erythrocytes (including PfEMP1) are both targets of protective antibody responses. The mechanism of the modified immune response was observed after subpatent infections. Subpatently infected mice had increased antigen-specific T-cell responses; they were not better protected than patently infected mice. The study of human volunteers, the absence of detectable malaria-specific antibodies probably reflects the extremely low parasite doses used for immunization. Induction of this type of immunity by immunizing with low doses of purified antigens from whole parasites may be an alternative but highly effective vaccine strategy.





Keywords: Merozoite; T-cell; antigen; immune response; parasite

Document Type: Research Article

Publication date: 01 March 2008

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  • Current Drug Metabolism aims to cover all the latest and outstanding developments in drug metabolism and disposition. The journal serves as an international forum for the publication of timely reviews in drug metabolism. Current Drug Metabolism is an essential journal for academic, clinical, government and pharmaceutical scientists who wish to be kept informed and up-to-date with the latest and most important developments. The journal covers the following areas:

    In vitro systems including CYP-450; enzyme induction and inhibition; drug-drug interactions and enzyme kinetics; pharmacokinetics, toxicokinetics, species scaling and extrapolations; P-glycoprotein and transport carriers; target organ toxicity and interindividual variability; drug metabolism and disposition studies; extrahepatic metabolism; phase I and phase II metabolism; recent developments for the identification of drug metabolites and adducts.
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