Results 181 to 190 of about 16,498 (214)
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The Genus Atoxoplasma (Protozoa, Apicomplexa)

The Journal of Parasitology, 1982
The apicomplexan protozoan genus Atoxoplasma Garnham, 1950 is resurrected and the family Atoxoplasmatidae n. fam. established for homoxenous blood parasites of birds that develop asexually in both the blood and intestinal cells, and form oocysts that are passed unsporulated in the feces, sporulate on the ground, and then infect new hosts.
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Tissue Apicomplexa

1999
Abstract Members of the Apicomplexa in human tissues other than the intestine and blood belong to the genera Sa cocystis and Toxoplasma of the family Sarcocystidae, characterized, as already stated, by two hosts in their life cycles. The Sarcocystis organisms occurring in the intestine of humans were studied in Chapter 8.
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HepatozoonParasites (Apicomplexa: Adeleorina) in Bats

Journal of Parasitology, 2013
(Uploaded by Plazi for the Bat Literature Project) We provide the first evidence of Hepatozoon parasites infecting bats. We sequenced a short fragment of the 18S rRNA gene (~600 base pairs) of Hepatozoon parasites from 3 Hipposideros cervinus bats from Borneo.
Pinto, C. Miguel   +3 more
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Endocytic Activity by Apicomplexa Parasites

Acta Parasitologica
Macromolecules are incorporated by eukaryotic cells through a process known as endocytosis, intensely analyzed in mammalian and yeast cells, but still lacking deep studies in pathogenic protists. Here we present what is presently known on endocytic activity carried out in some members of the Apicomplexa group (mainly concentrated in Plasmodium and ...
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Apicomplexa micropore: history, function, and formation

Trends in Parasitology
The micropore, a mysterious structure found in apicomplexan species, was recently shown to be essential for nutrient acquisition in Plasmodium falciparum and Toxoplasma gondii. However, the differences between the micropores of these two parasites questions the nature of a general apicomplexan micropore structure and whether the formation process model
Jiong Yang   +4 more
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Metabolic Pathways in the Apicoplast of Apicomplexa

2010
Intracellular parasites of the phylum Apicomplexa harbor a plastid-like organelle called apicoplast that is the most reduced organelle of this type known. Due to the medical importance of some members of Apicomplexa, a number of fully sequenced genomes are available that have allowed to assemble metabolic pathways also from the apicoplast and have ...
Seeber, Frank, Soldati-Favre, Dominique
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Apicomplexa Of The Blood

1999
Abstract The Apicomplexa of blood belong to the class Haematozoea, which has two orders: Haemosporida and Piroplasmida. Haemosporida has the family Plasmodiidae, with the genus Plasmodium. Piroplasmida has the family Babesiidae, with the genera Babesia and Entopolypoides ( Corliss, 1994).
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Apicomplexa

2016
Jan Votýpka   +4 more
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Secretory Organelles in Apicomplexa

2010
Apicomplexa interactions with their host are exquisitely dependent on unique secretory organelles that exocytose their contents during gliding motility, attachment, and host cell invasion. Recent developments boosted by molecular genetics and high throughput methods have unraveled a number of biological processes and allowed a better understanding of ...
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2016
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