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  • Associate Professor
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  • Clinical Research Nurse
  • Clinician Researcher
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  • Master Student
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  • Permanent Researcher
  • Pharmacist
  • PhD Student
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  • Post-doc
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  • Research Engineer
  • Retired scientist
  • Technician
  • Undergraduate Student
  • Veterinary
  • Visiting Scientist
  • Deputy Director of Center
  • Deputy Director of Department
  • Deputy Director of National Reference Center
  • Deputy Head of Facility
  • Director of Center
  • Director of Department
  • Director of Institute
  • Director of National Reference Center
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© Research
Publication : Current issues in molecular biology

Manipulating the Plasmodium genome

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Current issues in molecular biology - 01 Jan 2005

Carvalho TG, Ménard R

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 15580779

Curr Issues Mol Biol 2005 Jan;7(1):39-55

Genome manipulation, the primary tool for assigning function to sequence, will be essential for understanding Plasmodium biology and malaria pathogenesis in molecular terms. The first success in transfecting Plasmodium was reported almost ten years ago. Gene-targeting studies have since flourished, as Plasmodium is haploid and integrates DNA only by homologous recombination. These studies have shed new light on the function of many proteins, including vaccine candidates and drug resistance factors. However, many essential proteins, including those involved in parasite invasion of erythrocytes, cannot be characterized in the absence of conditional mutagenesis. Proteins also cannot be identified on a functional basis as random DNA integration has not been achieved. We overview here the ways in which the Plasmodium genome can be manipulated. We also point to the tools that should be established if our goal is to address parasite infectivity in a systematic way and to conduct refined structure-function analysis of selected products.