1.Identification of newly isolated Babesia parasites from cattle in Korea by using the Bo-RBC-SCID mice.
Shin Hyeong CHO ; Tong Soo KIM ; Hyeong Woo LEE ; Masayoshi TSUJI ; Chiaki ISHIHARA ; Jong Taek KIM ; Sung Hwan WEE ; Chung Gil LEE
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2002;40(1):33-40
Attempts were made to isolate and identify Korean bovine Babesia parasite. Blood samples were collected from Holstein cows in Korea, and Babesia parasites were propagated in SCID mice with circulating bovine red blood cells for isolation. The isolate was then antigenically and genotypically compared with several Japanese isolates. The Korean parasite was found to be nearly identical to the Oshima strain isolated from Japanese cattle, which was recently designated as Babesia ovata oshimensis n. var. Haemaphysalis longicornis was the most probable tick species that transmited the parasite.
Animals
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Arthropod Vectors/parasitology
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Babesia bovis/genetics/*isolation & purification
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Babesiosis/parasitology
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Base Sequence
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Cattle/*parasitology
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Cattle Diseases/parasitology
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DNA, Protozoan/genetics
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DNA, Ribosomal/genetics
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Erythrocytes/parasitology
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Korea
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Mice
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*Mice, SCID
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Molecular Sequence Data
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Phylogeny
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Ticks/parasitology
2.Detection of Babesia spp. in Free-Ranging Pukus, Kobus vardonii, on a Game Ranch in Zambia.
Hetron Mweemba MUNANG'ANDU ; Musso MUNYEME ; Andrew Mubila NAMBOTA ; King Shimumbo NALUBAMBA ; Victor M SIAMUDAALA
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2011;49(4):437-440
Babesia spp. were detected from 4 asymptomatic pukus captured on a game ranch in central Zambia in October 2008. Blood smears were examined in 4 species of aymptomatic free-ranging antelopes, namely the puku (Kobus vordanii), reedbuck (Redunca arundinum), bushbuck (Tragelaphus sylvaticus), and kudu (Tragelaphus strepsiceros), and showed the presence of Babesia parasites only in the puku. In the puku, the prevalence of babesiosis was estimated at 33.3% (n=12), while the overall prevalence in all examined animals was 8.5% (n=47). The parasites showed morphological characteristics of paired ring-like stages with the length varying between 1.61 microm and 3.02 microm (mean=2.12 microm, n=27; SD=0.76 microm). Both the infected and non-infected pukus showed good body condition scores (BCS), while the dominant tick species detected from all animals were Rhipicephalus appendiculatus, Rhipicephalus spp., and Boophilus spp. To our knowledge this is the first report of Babesia spp. infection in pukus in Zambia. These findings suggest that wildlife could play an important role in the epidemiology of babesiosis in Zambia.
Animals
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Animals, Wild/parasitology
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Antelopes/*parasitology
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Arachnid Vectors/classification
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Asymptomatic Diseases
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Babesia/*isolation & purification/ultrastructure
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Babesiosis/epidemiology/transmission/*veterinary
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Erythrocytes/parasitology
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Prevalence
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Rhipicephalus/classification
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Tick Infestations/epidemiology/parasitology/veterinary
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Ticks/parasitology
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Zambia/epidemiology
3.Plasmodium falciparum Cultivation Using the Petri Dish: Revisiting the Effect of the 'Age' of Erythrocytes and the Interval of Medium Change.
Young A KIM ; Je Eun CHA ; Sun Young AHN ; Seung Ho RYU ; Joon Sup YEOM ; Hyo Il LEE ; Chang Gyun KIM ; Ju Young SEOH ; Jae Won PARK
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2007;22(6):1022-1025
Differences in the characteristics of the culture conditions can influence the multiplication rate of Plasmodium falciparum. The Petri dish method is one of the most popular methods of cultivating this parasite. In many previous studies, ideal culture conditions of the Petri dish method were achieved by using erythrocytes collected from blood that had been stored for at least 2 weeks, with daily changes of the medium. In the present study, we studied the multiplication rate of P. falciparum in cultures containing erythrocytes of various ages together with changing the medium at various intervals of time. Our results strongly suggest that the rate of in vitro multiplication of P. falciparum was higher in freshly collected erythrocytes than in aged erythrocytes regardless of the anticoagulant and that when the parasitemia is lower than 8% with a hematocrit of 5%, the medium change interval can be as long as 48 hr without a great reduction in the rate of multiplication.
Animals
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Blood Specimen Collection
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Cell Aging
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Culture Media
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Erythrocytes/*parasitology
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Plasmodium falciparum/*growth & development
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Time Factors
4.Suppressive effect of culture supernatant of erythrocytes and serum from dogs infected with Babesia gibsoni on the morphological maturation of canine reticulocytes in vitro.
Mohammad Alamgir HOSSAIN ; Osamu YAMATO ; Gonhyung KIM ; Masahiro YAMASAKI ; Yoshimitsu MAEDE
Journal of Veterinary Science 2007;8(2):169-174
The present study evaluated the effects of infected culture supernatant of erythrocytes, fractionation of culture supernatant and serum from dogs infected with Babesia gibsoni (B. gibsoni) on the maturation of canine reticulocytes in vitro. The SDS-PAGE demonstrated that significantly broader bands were generated by both the infected culture supernatant of erythrocytes and the serum from dogs chronically infected with B. gibsoni. The culture supernatant of erythrocytes infected with B. gibsoni strongly suppressed the maturation of reticulocytes. Prior studies showed that chronically infected serum had inhibitory effects on both the maturation of reticulocytes and the canine pyrimidine 5'-nucleotidase subclass I and purine-specific 5'-nucleotidase activity. In addition, serum free infected culture supernatant of erythrocytes had an inhibitory effect on the morphological maturation of reticulocytes. These results suggest that infected serum and culture supernatant of erythrocytes might accumulate excess proteins and/or metabolites as a result of the inhibited maturation of reticulocytes and decreased activity of erythrocyte 5'-nucleotidase. Furthermore, the fractions observed at >150 kDa- and 150-70 kDa- in the infected culture supernatant and serum retarded the maturation of canine reticulocytes in vitro. The results obtained from the in vitro examinations, in the present study, suggested that B. gibsoni itself and/or its metabolites might release certain proteins in the infected culture supernatant and serum from infected dogs and as a result delay morphological maturation of canine reticulocytes.
Animals
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Babesia/*immunology
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Babesiosis/blood/immunology/parasitology/*veterinary
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Cell Differentiation/immunology
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Dog Diseases/*blood/immunology/*parasitology
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Dogs
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Electrophoresis, Polyacrylamide Gel
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Erythrocytes/*immunology
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Reticulocytes/*immunology
5.Expressed Sequence Tag Analysis of the Erythrocytic Stage of Plasmodium berghei.
Ji Woong SEOK ; Yong Seok LEE ; Eun Kyung MOON ; Jung Yub LEE ; Bijay Kumar JHA ; Hyun Hee KONG ; Dong Il CHUNG ; Yeonchul HONG
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2011;49(3):221-228
Rodent malaria parasites, such as Plasmodium berghei, are practical and useful model organisms for human malaria research because of their analogies to the human malaria in terms of structure, physiology, and life cycle. Exploiting the available genetic sequence information, we constructed a cDNA library from the erythrocytic stages of P. berghei and analyzed the expressed sequence tag (EST). A total of 10,040 ESTs were generated and assembled into 2,462 clusters. These EST clusters were compared against public protein databases and 48 putative new transcripts, most of which were hypothetical proteins with unknown function, were identified. Genes encoding ribosomal or membrane proteins and purine nucleotide phosphorylases were highly abundant clusters in P. berghei. Protein domain analyses and the Gene Ontology functional categorization revealed translation/protein folding, metabolism, protein degradation, and multiple family of variant antigens to be mainly prevalent. The presently-collected ESTs and its bioinformatic analysis will be useful resources to identify for drug target and vaccine candidates and validate gene predictions of P. berghei.
Animals
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Computational Biology
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Erythrocytes/*parasitology
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*Expressed Sequence Tags
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*Gene Expression Profiling
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Mice
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Mice, Inbred C57BL
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Plasmodium berghei/*genetics/*pathogenicity
6.Preparation and biological application of carbon nanotube atomic force microscope probe.
Tieqiang ZHAO ; Liqiu GUO ; Shen DONG ; Feihu ZHANG
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2003;20(2):352-355
The atomic force microscope (AFM) with an atomic resolution is a powerful tool for biological structure. The probe is an important part that determines the resolution of AFM. Carbon nanotube is becoming an ideal AFM probe due to its unique structure physical and chemical properties. Carbon nanotube AFM probes can be made by manual assembly or chemical vapor deposition. Several proteins, nucleic acids and cells have been investigated with carbon nanotube probes. Not only the high-resolution images but also the determination of specific DNA sequence and haplotype were acquired. Carbon nanotube AFM probe will increasingly play an important role in biological studies.
Carbon
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Cells, Cultured
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Equipment Design
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Erythrocytes
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parasitology
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ultrastructure
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Microscopy, Atomic Force
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instrumentation
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Proteins
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ultrastructure
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Sequence Analysis, DNA
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methods
7.Parasitemia Characteristics of Plasmodium vivax Malaria Patients in the Republic of Korea.
Ae Jung HUH ; Yee Gyung KWAK ; Eu Suk KIM ; Kkot Sil LEE ; Joon Sup YEOM ; Yong Kyun CHO ; Chang Seok KIM ; Jae Won PARK
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2011;26(1):42-46
Parasitemia characteristics of Plasmodium vivax malaria in temperate regions may differ from those in tropical zones. However, most parasitological and clinical features of P. vivax malaria have been investigated in the latter. In this study, we investigated 383 malaria patients to clarify the parasitemia characteristics of a P. vivax strain in the Republic of Korea (ROK). The mean parasitemia (8,396/microL) was less than half of tropical P. vivax malaria, and multiple invasions of erythrocytes were not rare (53.5% of the patients, 2.4% of the total investigated RBCs), but less than the observations in tropical zones. The intervals between the first symptom onset and diagnosis were significantly longer in gametocyte (+) patients than in gametocyte (-) patients. Only half of the total patients had both genders of gametocytes (191 of 353), and the male gametocyte density (169/microL) was lower than that of P. vivax strains of a previous study. Multiple invasions of erythrocytes and gametocytemia were coincident factors of the degree of anemia in P. vivax malaria. The present findings demonstrate the P. vivax strain in ROK reveals relatively low parasitemia and low male to female gametocyte ratio. The low ratio may be related with low transmission efficacy.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Erythrocytes/parasitology
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Female
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Humans
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Malaria, Vivax/*diagnosis/epidemiology/parasitology
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Parasitemia/*diagnosis/epidemiology/parasitology
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Plasmodium vivax/isolation & purification
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
8.Parasitemia Characteristics of Plasmodium vivax Malaria Patients in the Republic of Korea.
Ae Jung HUH ; Yee Gyung KWAK ; Eu Suk KIM ; Kkot Sil LEE ; Joon Sup YEOM ; Yong Kyun CHO ; Chang Seok KIM ; Jae Won PARK
Journal of Korean Medical Science 2011;26(1):42-46
Parasitemia characteristics of Plasmodium vivax malaria in temperate regions may differ from those in tropical zones. However, most parasitological and clinical features of P. vivax malaria have been investigated in the latter. In this study, we investigated 383 malaria patients to clarify the parasitemia characteristics of a P. vivax strain in the Republic of Korea (ROK). The mean parasitemia (8,396/microL) was less than half of tropical P. vivax malaria, and multiple invasions of erythrocytes were not rare (53.5% of the patients, 2.4% of the total investigated RBCs), but less than the observations in tropical zones. The intervals between the first symptom onset and diagnosis were significantly longer in gametocyte (+) patients than in gametocyte (-) patients. Only half of the total patients had both genders of gametocytes (191 of 353), and the male gametocyte density (169/microL) was lower than that of P. vivax strains of a previous study. Multiple invasions of erythrocytes and gametocytemia were coincident factors of the degree of anemia in P. vivax malaria. The present findings demonstrate the P. vivax strain in ROK reveals relatively low parasitemia and low male to female gametocyte ratio. The low ratio may be related with low transmission efficacy.
Adolescent
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Adult
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Aged
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Aged, 80 and over
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Erythrocytes/parasitology
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Female
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Humans
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Malaria, Vivax/*diagnosis/epidemiology/parasitology
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Male
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Middle Aged
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Parasitemia/*diagnosis/epidemiology/parasitology
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Plasmodium vivax/isolation & purification
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Republic of Korea/epidemiology
9.Potential Interaction of Plasmodium falciparum Hsp60 and Calpain.
Seon Ju YEO ; Dong Xu LIU ; Hyun PARK
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2015;53(6):665-673
After invasion of red blood cells, malaria matures within the cell by degrading hemoglobin avidly. For enormous protein breakdown in trophozoite stage, many efficient and ordered proteolysis networks have been postulated and exploited. In this study, a potential interaction of a 60-kDa Plasmodium falciparum (Pf)-heat shock protein (Hsp60) and Pf-calpain, a cysteine protease, was explored. Pf-infected RBC was isolated and the endogenous Pf-Hsp60 and Pf-calpain were determined by western blot analysis and similar antigenicity of GroEL and Pf-Hsp60 was determined with anti-Pf-Hsp60. Potential interaction of Pf-calpain and Pf-Hsp60 was determined by immunoprecipitation and immunofluorescence assay. Mizoribine, a well-known inhibitor of Hsp60, attenuated both Pf-calpain enzyme activity as well as P. falciparum growth. The presented data suggest that the Pf-Hsp60 may function on Pf-calpain in a part of networks during malaria growth.
Amino Acid Sequence
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Calpain/genetics/*metabolism
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Chaperonin 60/chemistry/genetics/*metabolism
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Erythrocytes/parasitology
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Humans
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Malaria, Falciparum/parasitology
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Molecular Sequence Data
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Plasmodium falciparum/chemistry/enzymology/genetics/*metabolism
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Protein Binding
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Protozoan Proteins/chemistry/genetics/*metabolism
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Sequence Alignment
10.Glutathione Reductase and Thioredoxin Reductase: Novel Antioxidant Enzymes from Plasmodium berghei.
Gaurav KAPOOR ; Harjeet Singh BANYAL
The Korean Journal of Parasitology 2009;47(4):421-424
Malaria parasites adapt to the oxidative stress during their erythrocytic stages with the help of vital thioredoxin redox system and glutathione redox system. Glutathione reductase and thioredoxin reductase are important enzymes of these redox systems that help parasites to maintain an adequate intracellular redox environment. In the present study, activities of glutathione reductase and thioredoxin reductase were investigated in normal and Plasmodium berghei-infected mice red blood cells and their fractions. Activities of glutathione reductase and thioredoxin reductase in P. berghei-infected host erythrocytes were found to be higher than those in normal host cells. These enzymes were mainly confined to the cytosolic part of cell-free P. berghei. Full characterization and understanding of these enzymes may promise advances in chemotherapy of malaria.
Animals
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Antioxidants/*isolation & purification/*metabolism
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Cell Fractionation
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Cytosol/enzymology
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Erythrocytes/parasitology
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Glutathione Reductase/*isolation & purification/*metabolism
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Mice
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Plasmodium berghei/*enzymology
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Thioredoxin-Disulfide Reductase/*isolation & purification/*metabolism