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Has the time come for us to complement our malaria parasites?

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Cited by (16)

  • An exported kinase (FIKK4.2) that mediates virulence-associated changes in Plasmodium falciparum-infected red blood cells

    2014, International Journal for Parasitology
    Citation Excerpt :

    Our generation of multiple clones of transgenic parasites, in which expression of fikk4.2 was ablated, has for the first time, allowed us to perform a detailed functional analysis of this gene. As complementation is still often difficult to achieve in P. falciparum (and in this case technically infeasible), we instead chose to engineer multiple independent KO parasite clones based on two different gene targeting strategies – an approach that is widely accepted in malaria research when complementation is not possible (Goldberg et al., 2011). Not surprisingly, disruption of fikk4.2 had no effect on parasite replication in vitro, as has been previously demonstrated for some other members of the FIKK family as well as numerous other genes that encode exported parasite proteins (Crabb et al., 1997; Cooke et al., 2006; Maier et al., 2007, 2008; Glenister et al., 2009; Nunes et al., 2010).

  • Falcipain-2 inhibition by suramin and suramin analogues

    2013, Bioorganic and Medicinal Chemistry
    Citation Excerpt :

    Hundreds of millions of cases of malaria occur each year, resulting in about a million deaths, mostly from Plasmodium falciparum.1 Although malaria is a treatable and curable disease, P. falciparum is a highly adaptable parasite,2 resulting in growing resistance to antimalarial medicines. Currently, the most effective treatment for falciparum malaria is artemisinin-based combination therapy (ACT), but this strategy is now threatened by emergence of parasites with decreased sensitivity to artemisinins in Southeast Asia.3,4

  • Flow cytometry-assisted rapid isolation of recombinant Plasmodium berghei parasites exemplified by functional analysis of aquaglyceroporin

    2012, International Journal for Parasitology
    Citation Excerpt :

    A typical functional analysis of a selected gene often includes a transgenic line expressing a fusion to a fluorescent and/or epitope tag in parallel with a loss-of-function mutant (Haussig et al., 2011). Furthermore, it has been suggested that knockout (KO) mutants originating from at least two independent transfection experiments should be examined (Goldberg et al., 2011). Thus, the number of mice required just to clone mutant parasite lines following successful transfection cumulates to >30 when using the established method of limiting dilution.

  • Functional genetics in Apicomplexa: Potentials and limits

    2011, FEBS Letters
    Citation Excerpt :

    Instead, the isolation of two independent mutant clones exhibiting the same phenotype has been found sufficiently compelling. In view of the recent improvements in transfection technology, a request has been made to the malaria research field that complementation of knockout strains should now become a standard procedure [80]. By focusing on one-by-one gene knockout approaches, laboratories have succeeded in generating large numbers of mutants, with one study alone in P. falciparum producing and analysing 53 transgenic parasites implicated in one aspect of the parasite’s biology [81].

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