Malaria's journey through the lymph node
Author(s)
Good, Michael
Doolan, Denise
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2007
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
T cells attack Plasmodium-infected hepatocytes when fighting malaria, and it was thought that T cells first encountered Plasmodium antigens in the liver. Instead, immediately after infection, small numbers of parasites drain to skin lymph nodes where they can prime T cells to mount a protective immune response (pages 1035-1041).T cells attack Plasmodium-infected hepatocytes when fighting malaria, and it was thought that T cells first encountered Plasmodium antigens in the liver. Instead, immediately after infection, small numbers of parasites drain to skin lymph nodes where they can prime T cells to mount a protective immune response (pages 1035-1041).
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Journal Title
Nature Medicine
Volume
13
Issue
9
Subject
Medical and Health Sciences not elsewhere classified
Medical and Health Sciences