Results 271 to 280 of about 169,942 (293)
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Purine metabolism in Leishmania donovani and Leishmania braziliensis
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - General Subjects, 1978We have studied purine metabolism in the culture forms of Leishmania donovani and Leishmania braziliensis. These organisms are incapable of synthesizing purines de novo from glycine, serine, or formate and require an exogenous purine for growth. This requirement is better satisfied by adenosine or hypoxanthine than by guanosine.
J J, Marr, R L, Berens, D J, Nelson
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Proteophosphoglycans of Leishmania
Parasitology Today, 2000Proteophosphoglycans are an expanding family of highly glycosylated Leishmania proteins with many unusual and some unique structural features. The novel protein-glycan linkage in proteophosphoglycans - phosphoglycosylation of Ser by lipophosphoglycan-like structures - emerges as a major form of protein glycosylation in Leishmania.
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Cell Biology International
AbstractLeishmaniases affect millions of people around the world, caused by Leishmania parasites. Leishmania are transmitted by female sandflies from Phlebotominae subfamily during their blood meals. In mammals, promastigotes are phagocytosed mainly by macrophages, differentiate into amastigotes and multiply.
Tainá Cavalcante +7 more
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AbstractLeishmaniases affect millions of people around the world, caused by Leishmania parasites. Leishmania are transmitted by female sandflies from Phlebotominae subfamily during their blood meals. In mammals, promastigotes are phagocytosed mainly by macrophages, differentiate into amastigotes and multiply.
Tainá Cavalcante +7 more
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The subgenus Leishmania (Leishmania): a citation correction
Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 2000R, Lainson, J J, Shaw
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1999
Abstract The leishmaniae is a group of organisms that inhabit the tissues, specifically the monocyte-macrophage lineage and, to a lesser extent, other phagocytic cells. The leishmaniae and the closely related trypanosomes (see Chapter 5), which inhabit the blood and other tissues, constitute the blood and tissue flagellates.
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Abstract The leishmaniae is a group of organisms that inhabit the tissues, specifically the monocyte-macrophage lineage and, to a lesser extent, other phagocytic cells. The leishmaniae and the closely related trypanosomes (see Chapter 5), which inhabit the blood and other tissues, constitute the blood and tissue flagellates.
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Leishmania (Leishmania) amazonensis
Trends in ParasitologyMarcus S.A. Garcia +4 more
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Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 1983
R A, Neal, R S, Bray
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R A, Neal, R S, Bray
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